In a new study, researchers found targeting arterial stiffening earlier in a person’s lifespan could provide cognitive benefits in older age and may help to delay dementia.
The research was conducted by a team at the University of Oxford and University College London.
In the study, the team examined 542 older adults who received two measurements of aortic stiffness, at 64 years old and 68 years old.
Subsequent cognitive tests and brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans assessed the size, connections, and blood supply of different brain regions.
The body’s largest artery (the aorta) gets stiffer with age, and the study found that faster aortic stiffening in mid-life to older age was linked to markers of poorer brain health, for example:
lower brain blood supply reduced structural connectivity between different brain regions, and worse memory.
Medical interventions and changes of lifestyle made earlier in the lifespan could help to slow down arterial stiffening.
In an aging society where scientists expect a near tripling in the number of people living with dementia by 2050, identifying ways to prevent or delay its onset could have a significant societal and economic impact.
This study links heart health with brain health and gives researchers insights into the potential of reducing aortic stiffening to help maintain brain health in older ages.
The team says reduced connectivity between different brain regions is an early marker of neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease, and preventing these changes by reducing or slowing down the stiffening of our body’s large blood vessels may be one way to maintain brain health and memory as we grow older.
One author of the study is Dr. Sana Suri, Alzheimer’s Society Research Fellow.
The study is published in PLOS Medicine.
Copyright © 2021 Knowridge Science Report. All rights reserved.