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Obesity linked with exacerbated effects of Alzheimer's disease. Here's how

While people who are overweight may face a number of health issues, a recent study has discovered that being obese is an additional burden on brain health and may exacerbate Alzheimer's disease.

Published on: Jan 30, 2021 05:52 pm IST
ANI |
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While people who are overweight may face a number of health issues, a recent study has discovered that being obese is an additional burden on brain health and may exacerbate Alzheimer's disease. The pioneering multimodal neuroimaging study revealed obesity may contribute toward neural tissue vulnerability, whilst maintaining a healthy weight in mild Alzheimer's disease dementia could help to preserve brain structure.

Representational Image(Unsplash)

The findings, published in 'The Journal of Alzheimer's Disease Reports', also highlight the impact being overweight in mid-life could have on brain health in older age. "More than 50 million people are thought to be living with Alzheimer's disease and despite decades of groundbreaking studies and a huge global research effort we still don't have a cure for this cruel disease," lead author of the study, Professor Annalena Venneri from the University of Sheffield's Neuroscience Institute and NIHR Sheffield Biomedical Research Centre, said.

"Prevention plays such an important role in the fight against the disease. It is important to stress this study does not show that obesity causes Alzheimer's, but what it does show is that being overweight is an additional burden on brain health and it may exacerbate the disease," Venneri added.

In mild dementia patients, a positive association was found between obesity and grey matter volume around the right temporoparietal junction. This suggests obesity might contribute toward neural vulnerability in cognitively healthy individuals and those with mild cognitive impairment.

The study also found that maintaining a healthy weight in mild Alzheimer's disease dementia could help preserve brain structure in the presence of age and disease-related weight loss.

"Weight-loss is commonly one of the first symptoms in the early stages of Alzheimer's disease as people forget to eat or begin to snack on easy-to-grab foods like biscuits or crisps, in place of more nutritional meals," joint author of the study, Dr. Matteo De Marco from the University of Sheffield's Neuroscience Institute, said.

"We found that maintaining a healthy weight could help preserve brain structure in people who are already experiencing mild Alzheimer's disease dementia. Unlike other diseases such as cardiovascular disease or diabetes, people don't often think about the importance of nutrition in relation to neurological conditions, but these findings show it can help to preserve brain structure," Marco added.

This story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the text. Only the headline has been changed.
 
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