Healthy living can delay dementia - study

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Published Nov 12, 2014

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London - Living a healthy lifestyle could delay dementia by up to 12 years, according to a landmark UK study.

Heart disease could also be staved off by around six years compared with those who neglect their diet and exercise, said the health specialists.

The project tracking the lives of 2 500 men for 35 years pinpointed five steps in leading a long and disease-free life which mirror growing evidence about the benefits of healthy living.They are: taking regular exercise, not smoking, having a healthy bodyweight. eating a good diet and having a low alcohol intake.

The study in South Wales is the longest of its kind to examine the influence of environmental factors in chronic disease.

From 1979 to the present day, researchers from Cardiff University followed the lifestyle habits of men aged 45-59 living in the Caerphilly area.

They found that those who followed four or five of the specified healthy steps were 60 percent less likely to develop dementia.

There was a similar reduction in the risk of heart attacks and strokes, along with 40 percent fewer cancers.

There was also a 70 percent cut in the risk of diabetes, according to evidence presented yesterday at a Healthy Ageing summit run by the university. Professor Peter Elwood, who has led the School of Medicine study since its inception, said the findings were a “wake-up” call.

“Thirty years ago, only 30 men in our study followed all five of our recommended healthy steps,” he said.

“Although following these steps does not give them complete protection against disease, the men who, despite living healthily, developed a disease did so at a much older age than the men neglectful of their lifestyle.

“Thus the development of heart disease was delayed by up to six years and it was up to around an additional 12 years before dementia took its grip.

“On the less rosy end of the spectrum, 40 men in every 100 lived a life so neglectful that by any definition their lifestyle was unhealthy. They experienced none of the reductions in disease.”

He added: “The appalling fact is that recent surveys across the whole of Wales yield almost identical proportions of men and women following the healthy and unhealthy lifestyles found in Caerphilly 35 years ago. And the picture isn’t much better in England: 53 percent of men drink more than the recommended amount and only half of men meet the government-recommended scores for well-being.”

The advice given by the project has become familiar from other research showing that staying slim, eating lots of fruit and vegetables, exercising regularly, drinking in moderation and never smoking boosts longevity.

The Caerphilly participants come from a community where consumption of fruit and vegetables was low, so three or more portions a day was accepted as “healthy”. Fat making up less than 30 percent of calories was classed as a good diet.

Those regarded as physically active were walking two or more miles or cycling ten or more to work each day, or taking “vigorous” exercise regularly.

Low alcohol consumption was defined as three or fewer units per day, with abstinence not treated as healthy behaviour.

Clare Walton, of the Alzheimer’s Society which part-funded the project, said: “These studies are expensive and complicated but essential to understand how dementia can be prevented.”

The Caerphilly research was a pilot for the much larger UK BIOBANK study involving more than 500 000 Britons. This is led by Professor John Gallacher, who also works at Cardiff. - Daily Mail

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