In This Article
- Can dementia truly be prevented—or just delayed?
- Why starting in middle age might be too late
- How habits formed in your teens could impact your brain at 70
- Could cognitive health at age 11 predict dementia at 70?
- What early-life strategies protect brain health for the long haul?
Why Dementia Prevention Should Begin in Childhood, Not Old Age
by Scott Chiesa, UCL et al
More than 60 million people are estimated to be living with dementia, resulting in over 1.5 million deaths a year and an annual cost to the global healthcare economy of around US $1.3 trillion (almost £1 trillion).
Despite decades of scientific research and billions of pounds of investment, dementia still has no cure. But what of the old saying that prevention is better than cure? Is preventing dementia possible? And if so, at what age should we be taking steps to do so?
Despite what many believe, dementia is not simply an unavoidable consequence of ageing or genetics. It is estimated that up to 45% of dementia cases could potentially be prevented by reducing exposure to 14 modifiable risk factors common throughout the world.
Many of these risk factors – which include things like obesity, lack of exercise, and smoking – are traditionally studied from middle age (around 40 to 60 years old) onwards. As a result, several of the world’s leading health bodies and dementia charities now recommend that strategies aimed at reducing dementia risk should ideally be targeted at this age to reap the greatest benefits.
We argue, however, that targeting even younger ages is likely to provide greater benefits still. But how young are we talking? And why would exposure to risk factors many decades before the symptoms of dementia traditionally appear be important?
To explain, let’s work backwards from middle age, starting with the three decades covering adolescence and young adulthood (from ten to 40 years old).
Many lifestyle-related dementia risk factors emerge during the teenage years, then persist into adulthood. For example, 80% of adolescents living with obesity will remain this way when they are adults. The same applies to high blood pressure and lack of exercise. Similarly, virtually all adults who smoke or drink will have started these unhealthy habits in or around adolescence.
This poses two potential issues when considering middle age as the best starting point for dementia-prevention strategies. First, altering health behaviour that has already been established is notoriously difficult. And second, most high-risk individuals targeted in middle age will almost certainly have been exposed to the damaging effects of these risk factors for many decades already.
As such, the most effective actions are likely to be those aimed at preventing unhealthy behaviour in the first place, rather than attempting to change long-established habits decades down the line.
The roots of dementia
But what about even earlier in people’s lives? Could the roots of dementia stretch as far back as childhood or infancy? Increasing evidence suggests yes, and that risk factor exposures in the first decade of life (or even while in the womb) may have lifelong implications for dementia risk.
To understand why this may be, it’s important to remember that our brain goes through three major periods during our lives – development in early life, a period of relative stability in adult life, and decline (in some functions) in old age.
Most dementia research understandably focuses on changes associated with that decline in later life. But there is increasing evidence that many of the differences in brain structure and function associated with dementia in older adults may have at least partly existed since childhood.
For example, in long-term studies where people have had their cognitive ability tracked across their whole lives, one of the most important factors explaining someone’s cognitive ability at age 70 is their cognitive ability when they were 11. That is, older adults with poorer cognitive skills have often had these lower skills since childhood, rather than the differences being solely due to a faster decline in older age.
Similar patterns are also seen when looking for evidence of dementia-related damage on brain scans, with some changes appearing to be more closely related to risk factor exposures in early life than current unhealthy lifestyles.
Taken together, perhaps the time has come for dementia prevention to be thought of as a lifelong goal, rather than simply a focus for old age.
A lifelong prevention plan
But how do we achieve this in practical terms? Complex problems require complex solutions, and there is no quick fix to address this challenge. Many factors contribute to increasing or decreasing an individual’s dementia risk – there is no “one size fits all” approach.
But one thing generally agreed upon is that mass medication of young people is not the answer. Instead, we – along with 33 other leading international researchers in the field of dementia – recently published a set of recommendations for actions that can be taken at the individual, community and national levels to improve brain health from an early age.
Our consensus statement and recommendations deliver two clear messages. First, meaningful reductions in dementia risk for as many people as possible will only be achievable through a coordinated approach that brings together healthier environments, better education and smarter public policy.
Second – and perhaps most importantly – while it’s never too late to take steps to reduce your risk of dementia, it’s also never too early to start.
Scott Chiesa, Senior Research Fellow and Alzheimer's Research UK David Carr Fellow, UCL; Francesca Farina, Research Assistant Professor, Pritzker School of Medicine, University of Chicago, and Laura Booi, Senior Research Fellow, Social Gerontology, School of Health, Leeds Beckett University
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Related Books:
The Body Keeps the Score: Brain Mind and Body in the Healing of Trauma
by Bessel van der Kolk
This book explores the connections between trauma and physical and mental health, offering insights and strategies for healing and recovery.
Click for more info or to order
Breath: The New Science of a Lost Art
by James Nestor
This book explores the science and practice of breathing, offering insights and techniques for improving physical and mental health.
Click for more info or to order
The Plant Paradox: The Hidden Dangers in "Healthy" Foods That Cause Disease and Weight Gain
by Steven R. Gundry
This book explores the links between diet, health, and disease, offering insights and strategies for improving overall health and wellness.
Click for more info or to order
The Immunity Code: The New Paradigm for Real Health and Radical Anti-Aging
by Joel Greene
This book offers a new perspective on health and immunity, drawing on principles of epigenetics and offering insights and strategies for optimizing health and aging.
Click for more info or to order
The Complete Guide to Fasting: Heal Your Body Through Intermittent, Alternate-Day, and Extended Fasting
by Dr. Jason Fung and Jimmy Moore
This book explores the science and practice of fasting offering insights and strategies for improving overall health and wellness.
Click for more info or to order
Article Recap
New research reveals that dementia prevention should begin far earlier than once believed—potentially as early as childhood. Brain health is shaped by long-term exposures to modifiable risk factors like obesity and smoking, often starting in adolescence. By targeting prevention strategies early in life, we can shift the focus from reactive treatment to proactive protection, dramatically lowering global dementia rates.
#DementiaPrevention #BrainHealth #LifelongWellness #CognitiveHealth #EarlyIntervention #HealthyHabits #PreventDementia #YouthHealth #BrainDevelopment