The study undertaken in the University of Glasgow and led by researchers from the university's Institute of Health and Wellbeing, suggests that preventing or delaying cardiovascular disease or diabetes may delay cognitive decline and possible dementia.
While previous research has made the link between cardiometabolic diseases and worse cognitive abilities, the additive effect on cognitive skills of having more than one of these diseases has not been known until now, the research and published in the European Heart Journal said.
"Importantly our analysis took account of lots of things which might have resulted in an erroneous result; such as medication usage, gender, age, deprivation, education levels, depression, smoking history, alcohol intake and obesity," Lyall said.
This is significant because there are a rising number of people surviving with coronary heart disease (CHD) and, as obesity levels continue to rise, more people are also developing and living longer with diabetes.
"Our findings highlight the potential to protect against cognitive decline by addressing other conditions such as heart disease. The reduction in mental test scores was relatively small for individuals, but may expand as people age," Lyall said.
"Given rising levels of multi-morbidity, ie, where people are living with more than one chronic disease, and public health concerns regarding cognitive decline, our work has important implications for future research in this important area," Lyall said.
The researchers studied nearly half a million participants from the UK Biobank, from data taken between 2006 and 2010.
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