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Heavier Weight
Tied to Poorer Cognitive Function
By Amy Norton
| Mon Oct 9
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Overweight
middle-aged adults tend to score more poorly on tests of memory,
attention and learning ability than their thinner peers do, researchers reported Monday.
The findings, they say, suggest that a heavier weight in middle age may
mean a higher risk of dementia later in life.
Reporting in the journal Neurology, the researchers speculate that
higher rates of cardiovascular disease or diabetes might help explain
the link. But it's also possible that substances produced by fat cells,
such as the hormone leptin, have direct effects on the brain. Both
obesity and dementia, including Alzheimer's disease, are becoming
increasingly common, noted lead study author Dr. Maxime Cournot, of
Toulouse University Hospital in France.
"Our results, along with other previous studies, strongly suggest a
greater risk of dementia in these (overweight) persons at middle-age,"
Cournot told Reuters Heath.
The study included 2,223 healthy French adults who were between the
ages of 32 and 62 in 1996. At that time, they took a battery of
standard cognitive tests, assessing abilities like memory, attention
and speed of learning. Five years later, they took the tests again.
In general, the researchers found, people with a high body mass index
(BMI) garnered lower test scores than those with a lower BMI. They also
tended to show greater cognitive decline between the two test periods.
Factors such as age, education and general health did not seem to
explain the link.
According to Cournot, the tests used in the study are sensitive enough
to detect "small variations" in cognition, and the weight-related
differences seen among these healthy middle-aged adults would probably
not be obvious in daily life.
But over time, the researcher explained, there could be more apparent
effects on the rate of age-related mental decline.
It's possible, according to Cournot's team, that excess fat cells have
some direct effect on brain function. For example, some studies suggest
the "hunger" hormone leptin, which is produced by fat cells, plays a
role in learning and memory.
And although these study participants were in generally good health,
disorders like elevated blood pressure and diabetes could act as a
bridge between high BMI and poorer cognitive function.
Thickening and hardening of the blood vessels supplying the brain can
contribute to dementia, Cournot noted. Similarly, diabetes may harm
cognition by either leading to artery disease or via direct effects of
the hormone insulin on brain cells.
Regardless of what the impact of weight on dementia risk turns out to
be, Cournot said, there are already many reasons to maintain a healthy
weight. The potential effects on mental function, the researcher added,
may give people added motivation to change their lifestyle habits.
SOURCE: Neurology, October 10, 2006.
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