Close Menu
Health Care Today
  • Home
  • News
  • Fitness
  • Nutrition
  • Skin Care
  • Women’s Health
  • More
    • Mental Well-Being
    • Sexual Health
    • Press Release
    • Editor’s Picks
What's On
Rovner Recaps Medicaid Cuts’ Impact on Hospitals and Fields Caller Questions on Affordability

Rovner Recaps Medicaid Cuts’ Impact on Hospitals and Fields Caller Questions on Affordability

April 11, 2026
For Many Patients Leaving the ICU, the Struggle Has Only Just Begun

For Many Patients Leaving the ICU, the Struggle Has Only Just Begun

April 11, 2026
AI spots heart fat that may signal future heart disease risk

AI spots heart fat that may signal future heart disease risk

April 11, 2026
The Trump Administration Is Seeking Federal Workers’ Sensitive Medical Data. That’s Raising Alarms.

The Trump Administration Is Seeking Federal Workers’ Sensitive Medical Data. That’s Raising Alarms.

April 10, 2026
Do school smartphone bans actually save schools money?

Do school smartphone bans actually save schools money?

April 10, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Health Care Today
  • Home
  • News
  • Fitness
  • Nutrition
  • Skin Care
  • Women’s Health
  • More
    • Mental Well-Being
    • Sexual Health
    • Press Release
    • Editor’s Picks
Subscribe
Health Care Today
Home » Hypertension, heart disease, other factors linked to risk
News

Hypertension, heart disease, other factors linked to risk

staffBy staffFebruary 4, 2026
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email Telegram WhatsApp Copy Link
Hypertension, heart disease, other factors linked to risk

Share on Pinterest
A new study delves deeper into how lifestyle factors could influence dementia risk. Image credit: Elena Popova/Getty Images
  • While the causes of dementia are complex, many cases of dementia can be linked to several modifiable risk factors.
  • A new study finds that such risk factors are associated with nearly half of all dementias.
  • One of the study’s key insights is that dementias are actually conditions that begin many years before symptoms appear, and that addressing risk factors early in life may allow one to avoid dementias later on.
  • Vascular dementia, in particular, is linked to modifiable risk factors.

We can control, or at least positively influence, the risk factors associated with the development of nearly half of all dementias, says a new study from Skåne University Hospital in Sweden.

The study also reports that beta-amyloid plaques — a biomarker of Alzheimer’s disease — are tied to diabetes, while lower body mass index (BMI) was associated with accumulation of tau protein tangles, another Alzheimer’s biomarker.

The authors of the study analyzed data for 494 participants, with an average age of 65, who had enrolled in the prospective Swedish BioFINDER-2 study.

All were thoroughly evaluated during the process, with cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis, PET imaging, MRI scans, and clinical and cognitive evaluations. They were tracked over 4 years as changes in their brains were observed and recorded.

As our understanding advances regarding the manner in which dementia progresses, it has become clear that its appearance is not simply a late-life matter.

Sarah Bullard, PhD, ABPP, Director of Psychology at Gaylord Specialty Healthcare, who was not involved in the recent study, remarked to Medical News Today:

“I just heard someone say the other day that dementia is a middle-age disease and not a disease of old age. The truth is that changes in your brain often begin decades before symptoms appear.”

This may be especially true of vascular dementia, which accounts for 17–30% of dementia cases.

The new study, said Dung Trinh, MD, “treats [white matter hyperintensity] progression as a moving marker, not just a static correlate of aging, and shows that specific risk factors lead to [white matter hyperintensity] accumulation in people at risk for Alzheimer’s disease.”

Trinh, who was also not involved in the study, is an internist at MemorialCare Medical Group in Irvine, CA.

According to him, the study “supports the model that dementia develops from interaction between non‑modifiable factors [such as] age, APOE [gene], and modifiable ones — hypertension, metabolic risk, cardiovascular health — acting through cerebral small‑vessel disease.”

“This strengthens the rationale that aggressive management of vascular/metabolic risk and educational/cognitive enrichment can slow the trajectory toward symptomatic dementia,” said Trinh.

“Early intervention is critical for better outcomes,” Bullard underscored. “Neurodegeneration isn’t an inevitable part of aging. It’s the result of a lifetime of choices and exposures.”

“This gives us a huge window of opportunity for intervention. But it also means that the choices we make today have consequences that extend far into the future,” she said.

“In contrast, [the study] shows how genetic risk factors, particularly carrying the APOE ε4 allele, are more closely associated with the accumulation of beta-amyloid and tau, the hallmark proteins of Alzheimer’s disease,” said Joel Salinas, MD, MBA, MSc, FAAN, Chief Medical Officer and Co-Founder of Isaac Health, who was also not involved in the study.

Nonetheless, even for Alzheimer’s disease, addressing the same risk factors can reduce the risk of developing the condition, according to the study.

“Evidence suggests,” said Salinas, “it’s never too early, thus never too late, to start” adopting habits associated with better brain health and dementia prevention.

“Longitudinal data suggest that dementia risk accumulates over decades, with early‑life education, midlife vascular/metabolic health, and late‑life sensory and social factors all contributing,” noted Trinh.

“Low education and early‑life cognitive enrichment appear to set a baseline for cognitive reserve, while midlife hypertension, obesity, and diabetes particularly drive vascular and neurodegenerative changes that emerge years later,” he pointed out.

“A practical interpretation would be to start in early adulthood (education, physical activity, avoiding smoking), be especially aggressive in midlife (roughly 40s–60s) on vascular and metabolic control, and then sustain lifestyle/sensory/social optimization into late life.“

– Dung Trinh, MD

“While genetic risk cannot be changed,” cautioned Salinas, “early and sustained lifestyle interventions can significantly reduce the likelihood or delay the onset of dementia later in life.”

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Articles

AI spots heart fat that may signal future heart disease risk

AI spots heart fat that may signal future heart disease risk

April 11, 2026
High-quality plant diets protect against Alzheimer’s, even when started late at life

High-quality plant diets protect against Alzheimer’s, even when started late at life

April 10, 2026
AI shows promise, but real-world use raises questions

AI shows promise, but real-world use raises questions

April 10, 2026
Top Articles
Ways by Which Your Partner Impacts Your Life: Therapist Explains

Ways by Which Your Partner Impacts Your Life: Therapist Explains

January 8, 2020
Mobile Calls Associated With Risk of High Blood Pressure

Mobile Calls Associated With Risk of High Blood Pressure

January 6, 2020
Review: 7 Future Fashion Trends Shaping the Future of Fashion

Review: 7 Future Fashion Trends Shaping the Future of Fashion

January 10, 2020
Average Mobile Data Usage Now Exceeds 10GB Per Month

Average Mobile Data Usage Now Exceeds 10GB Per Month

January 5, 2020
Rovner Recaps Medicaid Cuts’ Impact on Hospitals and Fields Caller Questions on Affordability

Rovner Recaps Medicaid Cuts’ Impact on Hospitals and Fields Caller Questions on Affordability

April 11, 2026
Don't Miss
High-quality plant diets protect against Alzheimer’s, even when started late at life
News

High-quality plant diets protect against Alzheimer’s, even when started late at life

April 10, 2026

Share on PinterestA new study links a healthy plant-based diet, even when started at older…

HAS gives a first favorable opinion on the reimbursement of digital therapy

HAS gives a first favorable opinion on the reimbursement of digital therapy

April 10, 2026
The social role of individuals is neither predestined nor fixed

The social role of individuals is neither predestined nor fixed

April 10, 2026
AI shows promise, but real-world use raises questions

AI shows promise, but real-world use raises questions

April 10, 2026
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Contact
© 2026 Health Care Today. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.