Midlife obesity is associated with higher dementia risk for women later in life, a new study suggests, but not poor diet and inactivity.

‘Obesity is a well-established risk factor for cerebrovascular disease. Cerebrovascular disease contributes to dementia later in life.
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The study involved one of every four women born in the United Kingdom between 1935 to 1950, or nearly 1,137,000 women. They had an average age of 56 and did not have dementia at the start of the study. Participants were asked about their height, weight, diet, and exercise at the start of the study. 




BMI is a measure of a person's body size based on their height and weight. For the study, a BMI between 20 and 25 was considered desirable, and a BMI of 30 or higher was considered obese. Women who reported exercising less than once per week were considered inactive. Those who exercised more often were considered active. Women's reported usual diet was used to calculate their calorie intake.
Researchers then followed the women for an average of 18 years. After 15 years from the start of the study, 18,695 women were diagnosed with dementia.
Researchers adjusted for age, education, smoking, and many other factors. They found that women who were obese at the start of the study had, in the long-term, a 21-percent greater risk of dementia compared to women with a desirable BMI. Among the obese women, 2.1 percent, or 3,948 of 177,991 women, were diagnosed with dementia. This is compared to 1.6 percent of women with desirable BMI, or 7,248 of 434,923 women, who were diagnosed with the disease.
However, while low-calorie intake and inactivity were associated with a higher risk of dementia during the first ten years of the study, these associations weakened substantially, and after 15 years, neither was strongly linked to dementia risk.
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Floud continued, "On the other hand, obesity in midlife was linked with dementia 15 or more years later."
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Source-Eurekalert