Dementia: Multiple mental health conditions linked to 90% higher risk

Evan Walker
Evan Walker TheMediTary.Com |
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Having more than one mental health condition may substantially increase dementia risk, according to a new study. Tatiana Maksimova/Getty Images
  • Past research has linked certain mental health conditions, such as depression and anxiety, to an increased risk for dementia.
  • A new study has found that people who have multiple mental health conditions have a higher risk of developing dementia than those with one.
  • Coexisting mood and anxiety disorders correlated with increased dementia odds of up to 90%.
  • Researchers report that this risk percentage increases with each additional concurrent mental health disorder.

Past research has linked certain mental health conditions, such as depression, anxiety, post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and bipolar disorder to an increased risk for dementia — a neurological condition impacting about 57 million people globally.

Scientists believe that mental Health issues may be correlated with a higher dementia risk due to chronic inflammation and structural brain changes, as well as an increase in the protein Health">amyloid-beta in the brain, which is considered a hallmark of a type of dementia called Alzheimer’s disease.

Now, a new study recently published in the journal BMJ Mental Health reports that people who have multiple mental health conditions have a higher risk of developing dementia than those with one.

Researchers say this risk percentage increases with each additional concurrent mental health disorder.

MNT also spoke with Gary Small, MD, chair of psychiatry at Hackensack University Medical Center in New Jersey, who commented that he was not surprised by the study’s findings.

“Previous research has confirmed depression as a risk factor for dementia,” Small explained. “This new investigation demonstrating the degree of the effect of multiple psychiatric disorders is remarkable, and the findings raise questions about the reason for these results. We know that late-life dementia has a gradual, insidious onset and that a patient’s self-awareness of their cognitive decline can trigger emotional reactions that lead to depression, anxiety, and other mental disorders.”

“Another possible explanation is that the underlying brain disease leading to dementia also contributes to mood symptoms,” he continued.

“Our UCLA research team performed brain scans of older adults using positron emission tomography (PET) to visualize amyloid plaques and tau tangles, the abnormal protein deposits of Alzheimer’s disease. We found significantly higher abnormal protein levels in study volunteers with late-life depression compared with controls, suggesting that these brain abnormalities linked to Alzheimer’s dementia may also contribute to major depression in older adults,” he explained.

Small said it’s important for researchers to continue to find other health issues that may increase a person’s risk of developing dementia, as dementia is the most common mental disorder of late life.

“The risk for developing Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia is 10% for people ages 65 and older, and that risk approaches 40% by age 85 years. The 2024 Lancet Commission has identified 14 modifiable risk factors for dementia, and knowledge of these factors empowers people to lower their future risk for the disease.”
— Gary Small, MD

As for the next steps for this research, Small said further study should illuminate the details of these known risk factors and reveal others not yet discovered.

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