Health

15 Risk Factors Identified For Early-Onset Dementia

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There are a lot of concrete things people can do to help reduce their risk of getting dementia in their forties or fifties, a new study suggests.

For the study, researchers examined detailed genetic and medical information for roughly 356,000 adults who were 55 years old on average and had no history of dementia. During an average follow-up period of eight years, 485 people were diagnosed with what’s known as “young-onset” dementia, or cases caught in people under 65.

Social isolation, alcohol use disorder, and preventable or poorly managed chronic health conditions were all among the risk factors associated with an increased risk of young-onset dementia, according to study results published in JAMA Neurology.

This is actually good news, because these are what’s known as modifiable risk factors, which means people have some control over their odds of developing young-onset dementia, says Andrew Budson, MD, a neurology professor at Boston University and chief of cognitive behavioral neurology at the VA Boston.

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