Challenges

Here’s a to-do list of things that are linked to a substantially lower risk of dementia caused by Alzheimer’s disease: Take a brisk daily walk, don’t smoke, eat a Mediterranean-style diet (that means rarely consuming red meat and nixing fast food) and do something challenging for your brain.
According to a study published in the June 2020 edition of the journal Neurology, following four or five of the healthy habits detailed in it (and below) may decrease your risk of Alzheimer’s dementia by as much as 60 percent, compared with those who follow none or only one of these behaviors. For those in the study, even practicing just two or three lowered their dementia risk by 37 percent.
The study was first presented at the 2019 Alzheimer’s Association International Conference.
Although previous research has looked at the link between individual lifestyle behaviors — say, exercise — and a lower risk of dementia, few studies have examined the effect of combining multiple behaviors.
“The findings strengthen the association between healthy behaviors and lower risk,” Richard Hodes, M.D., director of the National Institute of Aging, said in a prepared statement. Hodes was not involved in the study, but his agency funded it.
In the study, researchers from Rush University Medical Center in Chicago looked at data from nearly 3,000 older adults in two long-running federally funded studies examining risk factors for Alzheimer’s dementia in a community of older Chicago residents.
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