Changing stroke rehab and research worldwide now.Time is Brain! trillions and trillions of neurons that DIE each day because there are NO effective hyperacute therapies besides tPA(only 12% effective). I have 523 posts on hyperacute therapy, enough for researchers to spend decades proving them out. These are my personal ideas and blog on stroke rehabilitation and stroke research. Do not attempt any of these without checking with your medical provider. Unless you join me in agitating, when you need these therapies they won't be there.

What this blog is for:

My blog is not to help survivors recover, it is to have the 10 million yearly stroke survivors light fires underneath their doctors, stroke hospitals and stroke researchers to get stroke solved. 100% recovery. The stroke medical world is completely failing at that goal, they don't even have it as a goal. Shortly after getting out of the hospital and getting NO information on the process or protocols of stroke rehabilitation and recovery I started searching on the internet and found that no other survivor received useful information. This is an attempt to cover all stroke rehabilitation information that should be readily available to survivors so they can talk with informed knowledge to their medical staff. It lays out what needs to be done to get stroke survivors closer to 100% recovery. It's quite disgusting that this information is not available from every stroke association and doctors group.

Monday, November 23, 2020

Protective Effects of Leisure Activity on Dementia Risk Called Into Question

Well shit, there goes one of my prevention plans, although I will continue my social contacts and physical activity as much as possible anyway.

There is always coffee:

Coffee May Lower Your Risk of Dementia Feb. 2013

And this: Coffee's Phenylindanes Fight Alzheimer's Plaque 

How coffee protects against Parkinson’s Aug. 2014  

How Coffee May Protect Brain Health: A New Study Suggests The Benefits Aren't Just From Caffeine December 2018

The latest here:

Protective Effects of Leisure Activity on Dementia Risk Called Into Question

Previous short-term studies may reflect consequences of preclinical dementia

Study Authors: Andrew Sommerlad, Séverine Sabia, et al.; Victor W. Henderson, Merrill F. Elias

Target Audience and Goal Statement: Geriatricians, neurologists, primary care physicians, psychiatrists

The goal of this study was to examine the association between participation in leisure activities and incident dementia.

Questions Addressed:

  • Was leisure activity participation associated with lower risk of incident dementia in a large longitudinal study with an average 18-year follow-up?
  • How does length of follow-up affect the associations between activity participation and dementia; specific activities and dementia; and leisure activity change over 10 years and subsequent incident dementia?

Study Synopsis and Perspective:

The aging population and the lack of any disease-modifying treatments for dementia have increased interest in modifiable lifestyle factors that might help prevent or delay cognitive decline and onset of dementia, and maintain quality of life in old age.

Action Points

  • There was no evidence of a protective association between leisure activity participation and dementia, and no specific type of leisure activity was consistently associated with dementia risk, according to a large longitudinal study of London-based civil servants.
  • The findings suggest that decreases in leisure activity participation may be a prodromal feature of dementia, and simply increasing activities may not be a strategy for preventing dementia.

Leisure activities, i.e., pursuits engaged in for relaxation or pleasure outside of work and household responsibilities, have been studied extensively in this regard, since such activity involves three key aspects of cognitive reserve: mental activity, physical activity, and social engagement.

According to recent results from the longitudinal Whitehall II study, participating in leisure activities such as reading or going to the movies at age 56 was not linked to less dementia risk 18 years later.

However, higher participation at age 66 was tied to a lower likelihood of dementia over 8.3 years, suggesting leisure activity declines during the preclinical stage of dementia, reported Andrew Sommerlad PhD, of University College London, and colleagues in Neurology.

For each standard deviation higher on total leisure activity, dementia risk was 18% lower (HR 0.82, 95% CI 0.69-0.98) when the mean follow-up was 8.3 years, 12% lower (HR 0.88, 95% CI 0.76-1.03) at 13 years of follow-up, and 8% lower (HR 0.92, 95% CI 0.79-1.06) at 18 years.

While the outcomes may appear to contradict earlier research suggesting that leisure activity may protect against dementia, most of those studies had shorter follow-up periods, assessing the effects of leisure activity that occurred less than a decade before diagnosis of dementia, the researchers noted.

Sommerlad and team evaluated the activities of 8,280 London-based civil servants in the Whitehall II prospective cohort study; 69% were men, 91% were white, and mean age at the start of follow-up was about 56.

At three points -- 1997-1999, 2002-2004, and 2007-2009 -- Sommerlad and team assessed how frequently participants engaged in 13 types of leisure activities in the past year. Leisure activities ranged from reading, music, and taking classes to cultural, religious, and social events. Dementia diagnoses were derived from three linked electronic health records.

Overall, 360 incident dementia cases were recorded over the follow-up period (incidence 2.4 per 10,000 person-years). Mean age at diagnosis was about 76. No specific activities were consistently associated with dementia risk.

Participants whose activity level dropped over the course of the study were more likely to develop dementia than those whose activity, even if low, stayed the same. Five percent of 1,159 people whose activity decreased developed dementia compared with 2% of 820 people whose activity level stayed low over the years.

The finding doesn't question the importance of keeping active, "but it does suggest that simply increasing leisure activity may not be a strategy for preventing dementia," Sommerlad said in a statement.

"More research is needed to confirm these results, but we know that early changes in the brain can start decades before any symptoms emerge," he added. "It's plausible that people may slow down their activity level up to 10 years before dementia is actually diagnosed, due to subtle changes and symptoms that are not yet recognized."

One limitation of the study was that dementia diagnoses were gathered from electronic health records and some cases may not have been diagnosed, the researchers noted. The study also did not consider dementia subtypes or physical intensity of leisure activity.

Source References: Neurology 2020; DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000010966

Editorial: Neurology 2020; DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000010962

Study Highlights and Explanation of Findings:

In contrast to previous, mostly shorter-term, studies (lasting less than 10 years), this longitudinal study found no robust evidence for a protective association between leisure activity participation and dementia, and no specific type of leisure activity was consistently associated with dementia risk.

"Leisure activity is linked to reduced risk of cognitive decline, mild cognitive impairment, and dementia, but these associations are often based on activity occurring less than a decade before dementia is diagnosed," noted Victor Henderson, MD, of Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, and Merrill Elias, PhD, MPH, of the University of Maine in Orono, in an accompanying editorial.

Among previous studies of specific activities, a large Australian assessment of computer use among 5,506 community-dwelling men ages 69 to 87 followed for up to 8.5 years found that, compared with no computer use, the adjusted risk for dementia appeared to decrease with increasing frequency of computer use, by almost 40% with at least weekly or daily use.

One recent study of people in England age 50 or older participating in cognitively stimulating activities over an 8-year follow-up found that volunteering and internet use were associated with reduced risk of cognitive impairment.

One interpretation proposed by Henderson and Elias is that leisure activity may help stave off dementia symptoms even when subclinical neuropathology is present, perhaps by enhancing cognitive reserve. "A second possibility is that early neural dysfunction in pathways that underlie motivation and goal-directed behavior makes it more difficult to initiate and sustain leisure activity," they added.

Indeed, apathy may be significant: in cognitively normal older people, a recent prospective study showed that those with severe apathy were nearly twice as likely to develop probable dementia compared with those who had low levels of apathy (HR 1.9, 95% CI 1.5-2.5, P<0.001) over 9 years of follow-up, providing novel evidence for apathy as a prodrome of dementia. While it is often concurrent with depression, apathy is neuroanatomically distinct in being correlated to the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and associated sub-regions in the basal ganglia.

Apathy was also associated with an approximately two-fold increased risk of dementia in a meta-analysis involving over 7,000 memory clinic patients. Adjustment for apathy definition and duration of follow-up explained 95% of heterogeneity in patients with mild cognitive impairment; these results seem generalizable to memory clinic populations, suggesting that apathy deserves more attention as a relevant, cheap, noninvasive, and easily measureable marker of increased risk for incident dementia, particularly because these vulnerable patients may forgo healthcare.

Thus, clinicians should be alert for signs of apathy -- marked by decreases in motivation and initiative, energy and enthusiasm, and gradual social withdrawal, which generally occur about 1 to 2 years before other symptoms of dementia. One expert geriatrician characterized apathy as a spectrum that follows that of dementia, and links worsening apathy with cognitive decline -- a process that can be slowed if apathy is assessed using a validated scale, such as the Apathy Evaluation Scale, and if diagnosed, treated.

"Large, long duration, randomized controlled trials could provide even stronger evidence of any causal relationship" between leisure activity and dementia, Henderson and Elias wrote. Studies that focus on lifestyle interventions, like POINTER in the U.S., may shed better light.

"Midlife and late-life leisure activity certainly does no harm, but its role in dementia prevention is not yet clear," they observed. "There is more work to be done."

Sommerlad and colleagues suggested that future research should investigate the socio-behavioral, cognitive, and neurobiological drivers of decline in leisure activity participation to determine potential approaches to improving social participation in those developing dementia.

"Our novel finding of association of dementia with activity decline and the timing of this decline suggests that changes in leisure activity participation may be a prodromal feature of dementia, which is consistent with retrospective accounts of decline in participation in activities preceding dementia onset. There should therefore be awareness among clinicians that those who decrease leisure activities in the absence of other causes might be developing dementia," the group concluded.

Reviewed by Henry A. Solomon, MD, FACP, FACC Clinical Associate Professor, Weill Cornell Medical College
 

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