Exercise an help ward off dementia

Posted by | June 11, 2016 10:54 | Filed under: Planet


Exercising after age 40 can help prevent Alzheimer’s disease.

Activity of any intensity, from walking the dog to mountain climbing, helps prevents the cognitive decline typical in patients with Alzheimer’s disease, experts said.

Recent research has shown abnormalities in the brain tissue begins several decades before the onset of cognitive decline.

As cases of Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis double every five years after the age of 65, most studies examining risk factors and cognitive disease recruit participants over the age of 60 or 70.

But, this new study by researchers at the University of Melbourne, tracked 387 women aged 45 to 55 when it began in 1992.

Dr Cassandra Szoeke, who led the study, said: ‘There are few research studies which have data on participants from midlife and have assessed cognition in all their participants in later life.

‘This research is really important because we suspect half the cases of dementia worldwide are most likely due to some type of modifiable risk factor.

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Copyright 2016 Liberaland
By: Alan

Alan Colmes is the publisher of Liberaland.

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