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Urinary Tract Infections Can Hasten Memory Loss in Alzheimer’s Patients


By Bob DeMarco 
Alzheimer’s Reading Room 

 

Urinary Tract Infections Can Hasten Memory Loss in Alzheimer's Patients
Bob DeMarco

My name is Bob DeMarco, I am an Alzheimer’s caregiver. My mother Dorothy lived with Alzheimer’s disease.

 

This week my mother had her second urinary tract infection of the year. Urinary Tract infections are a problem faced by many Alzheimer’s caregivers.

 

Urinary tract infections are particularly worrisome to me and they should be to most Alzheimer’s caregivers.

 

There is research evidence indicating that infections can hasten memory loss in persons suffering from Alzheimer’s. 

Jump to the Alzheimer’s Reading Room to continue reading – Urinary Tract Infections Can Hasten Memory Loss in Alzheimer’s Patients 

 
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Posted by on March 1, 2013 in memory loss

 

Statins may protect against memory loss


I have written often on this website about Statins and Alzheimer’s. But, this quote in the University of Michigan School of Public Health release caught my attention.

People at high risk for dementia who took cholesterol-lowering statins are half as likely to develop dementia as those who do not take statins.

“The bottom line is that if a person takes statins over a course of about 5-7 years, it reduces the risk of dementia by half, and that’s a really big change,” said Haan, who notes that the study did not look at statins as a treatment for existing dementia, only as a preventative. Statins are drugs that specifically lower LDL or bad cholesterol.

After I read this I had to ask myself a simple question, should I be taking statins?

My cholesterol is ok, but, everyone in my immediate family suffers from high cholesterol and takes medication. Even with medication, my mother suffers from high cholesterol, high blood pressure, and Alzheimer’s.

I’ll discuss this with my personal physician shortly and make the decision.

Statins may protect against memory loss

People at high risk for dementia who took cholesterol-lowering statins are half as likely to develop dementia as those who do not take statins, a new study shows.

The study consisted of older Mexican-Americans in Sacramento, Calif., who suffered from metabolic conditions that put them at risk for developing dementia, Alzheimer’s or cognitive impairment without dementia, said Mary Haan, epidemiology professor at the University of Michigan School of Public Health and lead author of the study. Some of the risk factors for dementia include high cholesterol, Type 2 diabetes, obesity and hypertension.

“The bottom line is that if a person takes statins over a course of about 5-7 years, it reduces the risk of dementia by half, and that’s a really big change,” said Haan, who notes that the study did not look at statins as a treatment for existing dementia, only as a preventative. Statins are drugs that specifically lower LDL or bad cholesterol.

The longitudinal study was originally funded in 1997 to look at metabolic and vascular conditions like hypertension and diabetes and their effect on the risk of dementia and Alzheimer’s disease. Earlier landmark findings by Haan’s group of the same study cohort established that certain metabolic and vascular disorders predicted Alzheimer’s and dementia. For instance, people with Type 2 diabetes are up to three times more likely to develop Alzheimer’s disease, they found.

In this current study, Haan’s group set out to measure whether taking statins over time lowered the development of dementia in that same high-risk population. The resulting paper, “Use of Statins and Incidence of Cognitively Impaired Not Demented and Dementia in a Cohort Study,” will appear in the July 29 issue of Neurology.

“In older people you have so many different chronic conditions, especially in this group, that the chance of any intervention having an effect is fairly limited,” Haan said. “Say you’re 75 or 80 and you’ve got six diseases. How much is a treatment really going to help? This showed if you started using statins before the dementia developed you could prevent it in about half of the cases.”

It’s likely that many people taking statins have already benefited unknowingly from the dementia fighting properties, she said. Haan hopes the study will help fuel randomized trials to test statins and their ability to prevent dementia.

Of 1,674 participants who were free of dementia at the start of the study, 27 percent, or 452 people, took statins at some point in the study. Over the five-year follow up period, 130 participants developed dementia or cognitive impairment. Researchers adjusted for factors such as education, smoking status, the presence of a particular gene thought to predict dementia, and history of stroke or diabetes.

“We aren’t suggesting that people should take statins for purposes other than what they are indicated for, but hopefully this study and others will open the door to statin testing for dementia and other types of cognitive impairment,” Haan said.

It’s not clear exactly how statins work to decrease the development of dementia. An emerging risk factor for dementia is high insulin, Haan said, and one theory is that statins may work on those insulin pathways in a way that lowers the high insulin levels in the brain that can lead to the classic Alzheimer’s pathology.

Statins lowered the risk of dementia in all participants, but the statins had more of an impact on the group at high risk due to metabolic syndrome. The next step, Haan said, is to determine exactly how the statins work on the biochemical pathways involved in dementia.

The research is funded by the National Institute on Aging and the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases of the NIH, and the American Health Assistance Foundation. Co-authors include Caryn Cramer and Sandro Galea of the U-M SPH Department of Epidemiology, Kenneth Langa of the U-M Division of General and Internal Medicine and U-M Institute for Social Research and John Kalbfleisch of U-M SPH Department of Biostatistics.

The University of Michigan School of Public Health has been working to promote health and prevent disease since 1941, and is consistently ranked among the top five public health schools in the nation. Faculty and students in the school’s five academic departments and dozens of collaborative centers and initiatives are forging new solutions to the complex health challenges of today, including chronic disease, health care quality and finance, emerging genetic technologies, climate change, socioeconomic inequalities and their impact on health, infectious disease, and the globalization of health. Whether making new discoveries in the lab or researching and educating in the field, SPH faculty, students and alumni are deployed around the globe to promote and protect our health.

Related Links:

Mary Haan

School of Public Health

Contact: Laura Bailey
Phone: (734) 647-1848

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Lack of good HDL Cholesterol Linked to Memory Loss

If you are genetically predisposed to Alzheimer’s by birth you might want to take a close look at this article and video.

My mother falls into this category so it does concern me.

clipped from health.usnews.com

News today that low levels of the “good” HDL cholesterol raises a person’s risk of memory loss and memory loss and dementia may send many folks rushing to their doctor for a cholesterol check. Indeed, the findings are pretty scary. Study participants with the lowest HDL levels—defined as less than 40 mg/dL—were 53 percent more likely to perform poorly on short-term memory tests compared to those with high HDL, defined as 60 mg/dL or greater. (These healthy participants were age 61, on average, experiencing the earliest signs of dementia that typically start in middle age.) Those whose HDL levels plunged over the six-year study also experienced a decrease in the number of words they were able to recall on the memory test, says study leader Archana Singh-Manoux, senior research fellow in epidemiology at the University College London.

The Good and the Bad
Video: Cholesterol: The Good and the Bad
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Brain Health Improving in Seniors, But Alzheimer’s Still a Top Concern

clipped from www.alzinfo.org

Memory loss and thinking problems are becoming less common among older Americans, according to a new national survey of seniors aged 70 and older. Though preliminary, the findings correlate with other studies showing that overall, seniors today tend to be more physically fit and suffer from less disability than earlier generations. Still, with the population as a whole growing older, millions of Americans will continue to suffer from Alzheimer’s disease and related disorders in the coming years, making Alzheimer’s a top priority for this and future generations.

the researchers, from the University of Michigan Health Center, found than over a 10-year period, from 1993 to 2002, the prevalence of mental impairment in seniors went down by 3.5 percentage points — from 12.2 percent to 8.7 percent, in a sample of some 11,000 people. The difference represents hundreds of thousands of people.

seniors with more formal education and personal wealth were less likely to have cognitive problems

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