Diabetes
Linked to Increased Risk of Alzheimers
(May
18, 2004 - NEWSdial.com)
Diabetes mellitus was linked to a 65 percent increased risk of
developing Alzheimer's disease (AD), appearing to affect some
aspects of cognitive function differently than others in a new
study supported by the National Institute on Aging (NIA) at the
National Institutes of Health. The findings, from the Rush Alzheimer's
Disease Center's Religious Orders Study, add to a developing
body of research examining a possible link between diabetes and
cognitive decline. The results reported today are among the first
to examine how certain cognitive "systems" – memory
for words and events, the speed of processing information, and
the ability to recognize spatial patterns -- may be affected
selectively in people with diabetes.
The research, by Zoe Arvanitakis, M.D., David Bennett, M.D., and
colleagues at the Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, IL,
appears in the May 2004 issue of the Archives of Neurology. The
investigators are part of the institution's Rush Alzheimer's Disease
Center, headed by Dr. Bennett. The AD Center is one of 30 across
the U.S. supported by the NIA to study and care for Alzheimer's
patients.
"The research on a possible link between diabetes and increased
risk of AD is intriguing, and this study gives us important additional
insights," says Neil Buckholtz, Ph.D., head of the Dementias
of Aging Branch in the NIA's neurosciences program. "Further
research, some currently underway, will tell us whether therapies
for diabetes may in fact play a role in lowering risk of AD or
cognitive decline."
Some 824 Catholic
nuns, priests, and brothers participating in the Religious Orders
Study
were followed for an average of 5.5
years. They received detailed clinical evaluations annually, including
neuropsychological testing of five cognitive "systems" commonly
affected by aging, AD, and other dementias – episodic memory
(memory of specific life events), semantic memory (general knowledge),
working memory (ability to hold and mentally rearrange information),
perceptual speed (the speed with which simple perceptual comparisons
can be made, such as whether two strings of numbers are the same
or different), and visuospatial ability (the ability to recognize
spatial patterns). Over the study period, 151 of the participants
had a clinical diagnosis of AD, including 31 who had diabetes.
The researchers found a 65 percent increase in the risk of developing
AD among those with diabetes compared with people who did not have
diabetes.
In measures of cognitive function, only in the area of perceptual
speed was there an association with an increased rate of decline
over time, by about 44%, when comparing the diabetes and non-diabetes
groups. Since stroke-related changes in the brain were found in
a previous study to be tied to a decline in perceptual speed, the
researchers could not say whether the link between cognitive decline
and diabetes appeared because of the changes in the brain associated
with Alzheimer's disease or those of some other common age-related
condition like stroke or other vascular complications. Studies
looking at pathological or brain imaging data would be needed to
address these possibilities.
In other areas of cognition, the rate of change over the time
period of the study was no different in the two groups. However,
at the start of the study, the baseline cognitive function scores
of people with diabetes were lower than those of people without
diabetes.
"We found that diabetes was related to decline in some cognitive
systems but not in others," says Dr. Arvanitakis of Rush,
the lead author of the report. "Since all participants have
agreed to brain donation at their deaths, we will have the opportunity
to examine the pathologic basis of the association of diabetes
to cognitive decline." The Rush researchers also expressed
their indebtedness to the more than 1,000 nuns, priests, and brothers
from across the U.S. participating in the Religious Orders Study.
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