Posted by: Bert Copple | January 18, 2008

Seniors Who Walk Find Lowered Risk for Types of Dementia, Study Says

A new study appears to confirm the benefits of CAREGivers walking and exercising with their clients. The report, published in the Dec. 19 online issue of Neurology, noted that seniors who walk regularly and also do other forms of moderate exercise are protecting themselves against a certain form of dementia. This study, reported on News-Medical.Net (http://www.news-medical.net/?id=33758), is yet another indicator of how Home Instead CAREGivers can have a positive impact on their clients’ lives by encouraging them to be physically active (an abstract of the article is available on the Neurology Web site at http://www.neurology.org/cgi/content/abstract/01.wnl.0000296276.50595.86v1.) 

In this study, Italian researchers found that physically active participants aged 65 and older significantly lowered their risk of developing vascular dementia, which is the second most common form of dementia after Alzheimer’s disease. Their study spanned four years and involved 749 men and women in Italy over age 65, none of whom had memory problems at the start of the study. By the end of the study period, 54 people had developed Alzheimer’s disease and 27 had developed vascular dementia.  

Research revealed that the top one-third of participants who exerted the most energy walking were 27 percent less likely to develop vascular dementia than were those people in the bottom one-third of the group. Study author Dr. Giovanni Ravaglia of the University Hospital S. Orsolo Malpighi in Bologna, Italy, said walking provided the same cognitive benefits as other, more demanding activities.

Here is an excerpt from the site linked above:

Seniors who walk regularly and also do other forms of moderate exercise are protecting themselves against a certain form of dementia.

According to new research people age 65 and older significantly lower their risk of developing vascular dementia which is the second most common form of dementia after Alzheimer’s disease. The study by Italian researchers was conducted over a four-year period and involved 749 men and women in Italy who were over age 65; at the start of the study none of the participants had memory problems.The researchers measured the amount of energy used in their weekly physical activities and this included walking, climbing stairs, and moderate activities, such as house and yard work, gardening and light carpentry.They found that by the end of the study period, 54 people had developed Alzheimer’s disease and 27 had developed vascular dementia.

Vascular dementia is caused when blood flow to the brain is impaired and blockages narrow the blood vessels supplying the brain; complete blockages lead to strokes and may also lead to vascular dementia.

People with conditions that damage blood vessels throughout the body, such as high blood pressure or diabetes are at an increased risk.

The research revealed that the top one-third of participants who exerted the most energy walking were 27 percent less likely to develop vascular dementia than those people in the bottom one-third of the group.

The participants who scored in the top one-third for the most energy exerted in moderate activities lowered their risk of vascular dementia by 29 percent and people who scored in the top one-third for total physical activity lowered their risk by 24 percent compared to those in the bottom one-third.

Study author Dr. Giovanni Ravaglia, from the University Hospital S. Orsola Malpighi, in Bologna, Italy says an easy to perform moderate activity such as walking provided the same cognitive benefits as other, more demanding activities.

Ravaglia suggests that physical activity may improve cerebral blood flow and lower the risk of cerebrovascular disease, which is a risk factor for vascular dementia and may also stimulate the release of key brain chemicals, and enhance the development of new nerve cells or the connections among those cells.

The study also found that physical activity was not associated with a reduced risk of Alzheimer’s disease.”


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