Menu
Wed, 24 July 2024

Newsletter sign-up

Subscribe now
The House Live All
Catalysing progress: How an incoming government can seize the moment to drive healthy growth Partner content
By MSD
Health
Urgent need to prioritise people living with obesity Partner content
Health
We need a heart disease action plan to end heartbreak for good Partner content
By British Heart Foundation
Health
“The Forgotten Majority”: Leading Charities Call for Action to Tackle Long-Term Conditions Partner content
Health
The next UK government must ensure health, safety and wellbeing standards are upheld Partner content
Health
Press releases

Study finds dementia risk increased with brain injury - Alzheimer's Society comments

Alzheimer’s Society

2 min read Partner content

A nationwide study of 2.8 million people over 36 years in Denmark has found that a person’s risk of developing dementia increases with the number and severity of traumatic brain injuries.


The study, published in The Lancet Psychiatry, found that people who sustained a traumatic brain injury were 24% more likely to be diagnosed with dementia than those without a history of traumatic brain injury over the study period. The risk of dementia increased with the number and severity of injuries, and even concussion was linked with a higher risk of dementia.

This study is one of the first of its kind to have a sufficient sample size and follow-up time to assess the effect of traumatic brain injuries in younger adults on long-term dementia risk.

Dr Doug Brown, Chief Policy and Research Officer at Alzheimer’s Society, said: ‘Over 95% of people who developed dementia in this study hadn’t had a brain injury, so the study does not tell us that traumatic brain injury is a definite cause of dementia. It does confirm earlier reports that people who have had brain injuries are at a slightly increased risk of developing the condition, but head injury is still a much smaller contributory factor for developing dementia than smoking, or a sedentary lifestyle – risk factors that are much easier for all of us to do something about.

‘There are 850,000 people with dementia – this number is set to rise to 1 million by 2021 and more research is urgently needed to fill the gaps in our understanding of lifestyle factors that increase dementia risk.’

Categories

Health