ADVERTISEMENT

This site is intended for non healthcare professionals. For the professional site, please click here

04/03/2009 - News

Education Both Delays AND Accelerates Alzheimer's

By: Robert W. Griffith, MD

Tools:

One of the risk factors for developing Alzheimer's disease is a poor educational level. This has been shown in a number of epidemiological studies.

One of the risk factors for developing Alzheimer's disease is a poor educational level. This has been shown in a number of epidemiological studies. But now a report from the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York has added a new twist. Their report, which is published in the journal Neurology , shows that the effect of having a higher education is biphasic. If one accepts that the patient moves through different stages, from impaired cognitive function to pre-dementia, and then an accelerated decline stage leading to the diagnosis of Alzheimer's. The theory of "cognitive reserve" implies that more education delays the acceleration phase of decline, due to this reserve of brain-power. However, after the stage of acceleration, the rate of decline picks up more in those with greater education, compared with the less-educated patients. In other words, the early signs of dementia may be masked in persons with higher educational achievement.

This is truly "good news, bad news". The chief investigator, Dr Charles Hall, summarizes the findings this way: "Higher levels of education delay the onset of dementia, but once it begins, the accelerated memory loss is more rapid in people with more education. . . . A person with 16 years of formal education would experience a rare of decline that is 50% faster than someone with just 4 years of education."

You can read more about the stages of the disease at the Alzheimer's Association website .

Source

HealthandAge Blog

Related Article

Educated Patients May Need Higher Threshold for Dementia Screening

Created on: 11/04/2007
Reviewed on: 04/03/2009

Your rating: None
Tools:

Add your comment

  • Allowed HTML tags: <em> <strong> <cite> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA
Copy the characters (respecting upper/lower case) from the image.