Dementia: High cardiorespiratory fitness linked to lower risk

Evan Walker
Evan Walker TheMediTary.Com |
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Maintaining cardiorespiratory fitness could help lower the risk of dementia even in those who have higher genetic risk for it. Image credit: Justin Paget/Getty Images.
  • More than 55 million people globally live with dementia.
  • Past research shows that certain lifestyle habits, such as being sedentary, can increase a person’s dementia risk.
  • Previous studies have shown that exercise could help lower a person’s dementia risk by as much as 20%.
  • A new study now suggests that people with high cardiorespiratory fitness may have a lower dementia risk over the long term.

Researchers estimate that more than 55 million people around the world live with dementia — an umbrella term for several brain conditions that negatively impact memory and social skills.

While scientists are still unclear as to what actually causes dementia, past research indicates that certain lifestyle habits — such as smoking, an unhealthy diet leading to obesity, and being sedentary — can increase a person’s risk of developing dementia.

At the same time, previous studies have shown that lifestyle interventions such as regular exercise can potentially help lower a person’s dementia risk by 20%.

Now, a new study recently published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine reports that people with high cardiorespiratory fitness — referring to how well a person’s circulatory and respiratory systems are able to move oxygen to muscles during exercise — may have lower dementia risk over the long term, including those who are genetically predisposed to the condition.

Medical News Today spoke to José Morales, MD, a vascular neurologist and neurointerventional surgeon at Providence Saint John’s Health Center in Santa Monica, CA, about this study who commented it was not surprising that individuals with high cardiovascular fitness have a lower risk of developing dementia.

“The strengths of this study are the longitudinal follow-up of a large cohort, stratification of their dementia risk, and an objective measurement of cardiovascular fitness,” Morales, who was not involved in the research, explained. “Data such as these may help motivate patients/people concerned or at risk for dementia to engage in regular exercise.”

“Almost everyone wants a nonpharmacological method of reducing their individual risks,” he added. “These and related findings can provide people with a sense of agency and self-determination, as well as inform societal efforts to maximize well-being.”

MNT also spoke with Jasdeep S. Hundal, PsyD, ABPP-CN, a board-certified clinical neuropsychologist and director of The Center for Memory & Healthy Aging at Hackensack Meridian Jersey Shore University Medical Center in New Jersey about this research.

“My initial reaction to these kinds of studies is always one of optimism and validation for our approach,” Hundal, who was not involved in this study, said.

He added that:

“The fact that the findings emphasize the critical role of [cardiorespiratory fitness] as a modifiable factor in reducing dementia risk even among individuals with a high genetic predisposition, is very encouraging and reassuring since this is something that we have been counseling in our clinics for years.”

He further noted that he and his colleagues often stress that exercise and physical activity are powerful tools for maintaining not just physical health, but also cognitive health over the lifespan, and that it can be neuroprotective for the aging brain.

“Studies like this expand our understanding of modifiable risk factors, such as fitness, which can complement genetic and pharmacological approaches,” Hundal added. “This not only benefits patients but also reduces the societal and economic burden of dementia.”

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