Dementia is a condition that occurs due to changes in your brain, so what does your heart health have to do with your chances of developing this disease? While a healthier heart and a healthier brain may not seem like they go hand in hand, many factors that contribute to the health of one also affect the health of the other. That’s why a healthier heart may affect dementia risk.
One reason heart health and dementia may be linked is that unhealthy arteries are thought to play a role in both conditions. Therefore, controlling risk factors that improve heart health, such as lowering blood pressure and cholesterol, is likely to also lower the risk for dementia because it keeps your arteries healthier.
There is no way to guarantee you won’t develop dementia or Alzheimer’s disease, but there are steps you can take that may make a difference. Some risk factors, such as your age, gender, race or genes can’t be changed, but you can control modifiable risks, which are related to lifestyle habits. Although an exact cause-and-effect relationship between these risk factors and dementia has not yet been established, research indicates that they may affect dementia risk in addition to heart health:
Although keeping your heart healthier doesn’t guarantee you won’t develop dementia or Alzheimer’s disease as you age, the benefits of better heart health are worth changing your lifestyle habits. At the very least, you’ll enjoy a healthier heart, but there’s a good chance the effort you make may also improve your brain health now and in the future.
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