Investigators examine health conditions tied to Alzheimer’s disease, vascular dementia

MedPage Today (1/5, George) reports, “Some health conditions associated with dementia appeared early and consistently long before diagnosis, while others became significant much later,” investigators concluded in findings published online in the Annals of Neurology. After evaluating “data for 347 people with Alzheimer’s disease, 76 people with vascular dementia, and 811 control participants without dementia,” researchers found that “for people with a subsequent diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease, the earliest and most consistent associations at all time points over a 15-year span included depression, erectile dysfunction, gait abnormalities, hearing loss, and nervous and musculoskeletal symptoms.” For people “eventually diagnosed with vascular dementia, the earliest and most consistent associations across 13 years were an abnormal electrocardiogram…cardiac dysrhythmias, cerebrovascular disease, non-epithelial skin cancer, depression, and hearing loss.”

Related Links:

MedPage Today (requires login and subscription)

Posted in In The News.