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Alzheimer’s starts
earlier for heavy drinkers, smokers
Newswise — Heavy
drinkers and heavy smokers develop
Alzheimer’s disease years earlier than
people with Alzheimer’s who do not drink or
smoke heavily, according to research that
will be presented at the American Academy of
Neurology 60th Anniversary Annual Meeting in
Chicago, April 12–19, 2008.
“These results are
significant because it’s possible that if we
can reduce or eliminate heavy smoking and
drinking, we could substantially delay the
onset of Alzheimer’s disease for people and
reduce the number of people who have
Alzheimer’s at any point in time,” said
study author Ranjan Duara, MD, of the Wien
Center for Alzheimer’s Disease at Mount
Sinai Medical Center in Miami Beach, FL, and
Fellow of the American Academy of Neurology.
“It has been projected
that a delay in the onset of the disease by
five years would lead to a nearly 50-percent
reduction in the total number of Alzheimer’s
cases,” said Duara.
“In this study, we
found that the combination of heavy drinking
and heavy smoking reduced the age of onset
of Alzheimer’s disease by six to seven
years, making these two factors among the
most important preventable risk factors for
Alzheimer’s disease.”
The study looked at 938
people age 60 and older who were diagnosed
with possible or probable Alzheimer’s
disease.
The researchers
gathered information from family members on
drinking and smoking history and determined
whether the participants had the ε4 gene
variant of the APOE gene, which increases
the risk of Alzheimer’s disease. People with
the ε4 variant also develop Alzheimer’s at
an earlier age than those who do not have
the gene variant.
Seven percent of the
study participants had a history of heavy
drinking, which was defined as more than two
drinks per day.
Twenty percent had a
history of heavy smoking, which was defined
as smoking one pack of cigarettes or more
per day. And 27 percent had the APOE ε4
variant.
Researchers found that
people who were heavy drinkers developed
Alzheimer’s 4.8 years earlier than those who
were not heavy drinkers.
Heavy smokers developed
the disease 2.3 years sooner than people who
were not heavy smokers. People with APOE ε4
developed the disease three years sooner
than those without the gene variant.
Adding the risk factors
together led to earlier onset of the
disease. People who had all three risk
factors developed the disease 8.5 years
earlier than those with none of the risk
factors.
The 17 people in the
study with all three risk factors developed
Alzheimer’s at an average age of 68.5 years;
the 374 people with none of the three risk
factors developed the disease at an average
age of 77 years.
The study was supported
by the Florida Department of Elder Affairs.
The American Academy of
Neurology, an association of more than
21,000 neurologists and neuroscience
professionals, is dedicated to improving
patient care through education and research.
A neurologist is a
doctor with specialized training in
diagnosing, treating and managing disorders
of the brain and nervous system such as
Alzheimer’s disease, epilepsy, multiple
sclerosis, Parkinson’s disease, and stroke.
For more information
about the American Academy of Neurology,
visit
http://www.aan.com.
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