Home
» Daily
News
Feb.
6 - Folate Deficiency Associated with Tripling of Dementia
Risk
Folate deficiency is associated with a tripling in the risk
of developing dementia among elderly people, suggests research
published ahead of print in the Journal of Neurology
Neurosurgery and Psychiatry.
The researchers tracked the development of dementia in 518
people over two years from 2001 to 2003. All participants
were over the age of 65 and lived in one rural and one urban
area in the south of the country.
Validated tests were carried out at the start and end of
the two year period to find out if they had a dementing illness.
Similarly, blood tests were taken to assess levels of folate,
vitamin B12, and the protein homocysteine, and how these changed
over time. High levels of homocysteine have been associated
with cardiovascular disease.
At the start of the two year period, almost one in five people
had high levels of homocysteine, while 17% had low vitamin
B12 levels and 3.5% were folate deficient. The higher the
levels of folate to begin with, the higher were vitamin B12
levels, and the lower those of homocysteine.
By the end of the study, 45 people had developed dementia.
Of these, 34 had Alzheimer’s disease, seven had vascular
dementia, and four had “other” types of dementia.
Dementia was more likely in those who were older, relatively
poorly educated, inactive, and had deposits of the protein
ApoE. The onset of dementia was significantly more likely
in those whose folate levels then fell further over the two
years, while their homocysteine levels rose. People who were
folate deficient to begin with, were almost 3.5 times more
likely to develop dementia.
Source:
British Medical Journal
(View
the Daily News Archive)
|