4.7 Article

The Longitudinal Association of Lifestyle with Cognitive Health and Dementia Risk: Findings from the HELIAD Study

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 14, Issue 14, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu14142818

Keywords

total lifestyle; cognition; dementia; Mediterranean diet; sleep; physical activity; functionality

Funding

  1. Alzheimer's Association [IIRG-09-133014]
  2. ESPA-EU program Excellence Grant (ARISTEIA) [189 10276/8/9/2011]
  3. Ministry for Health and Social Solidarity (Greece) [Dgamma2beta/omicroniotakappa.51657/14.4.2009]
  4. European Union (European Social Fund-ESF) through the Operational Programme Human Resources Development, Education and Lifelong Learning 2014-2020 [MIS 5049030]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The aim of the study was to investigate the association between a Total Lifestyle Index (TLI) and cognitive health over time and dementia risk in older people. The results showed that greater adherence to a healthy lifestyle pattern was associated with a slower decline of cognitive function and reduced dementia risk.
The aim of the current study was to investigate whether a Total Lifestyle Index (TLI), including adherence to the Mediterranean diet, sleep duration, physical activity and engagement in activities of daily living, is associated with cognitive health over time and dementia risk, in a representative cohort of older people. A total of 1018 non-demented community-dwelling older adults >= 65 years old (60% women) from the HELIAD study were included. A comprehensive neurological and neuropsychological assessment was conducted at baseline and at the 3-year follow-up evaluating cognitive functioning, and a dementia diagnosis was set. Diet, physical activity, sleep duration and engagement in activities of daily living were assessed using standard, validated questionnaires at baseline. Sixty-one participants developed dementia at follow-up; participants who developed dementia were older and had fewer years of education compared with participants with normal cognition. With the exception of sleep duration, participants with normal cognition at follow-up scored higher in the individual lifestyle factors compared to those who developed dementia. Regarding TLI, values were lower for participants with dementia compared with those with normal cognition. Each additional unit of the TLI was associated with 0.5% of a standard deviation less decline per year of the Global Cognition score, whereas for each additional unit of the TLI, the risk for dementia was reduced by 0.2% per year (p < 0.05). Our results suggest that greater adherence to a healthy lifestyle pattern is associated with a slower decline of cognitive function and reduced dementia risk.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available