Screening elderly for the blood
condition makes sense, researcher says.
Older adults suffering from
anemia - lower than normal red blood cell levels - may be at increased risk for
dementia, a new study suggests.
Anemia affects as many as 23
percent of seniors, the researchers say.
"We found a 60 percent
increased risk of dementia with anemia. After controlling for other factors
such as other medical illness, demographics, etcetera, the risk remained
elevated 40 to 50 percent," said lead study author Dr. Kristine Yaffe, a Professor
of Psychiatry, Neurology and Epidemiology at the University of California, San
Francisco.
"Given how common both
anemia and dementia are in older adults, more attention to the connection
between the two is important, and I do think screening older adults for anemia
makes sense," said Yaffe.
The study of more than 2,500
men and women in their 70s doesn't actually prove that anemia causes dementia,
however.
"Because we studied this
prospectively, we do think, as best we can tell, that anemia is causally
related to dementia, but with observational studies one can never say for sure.
But we did our best to exclude other explanations," Yaffe said.
The job of red blood cells is
to carry oxygen throughout the body. When you are anemic, less oxygen is
delivered to brain cells, Yaffe explained. "We think the association is
about low oxygen being carried to the brain," she said.
Anemia could also indicate poor
overall health, the study authors noted. Causes of anemia include iron
deficiency and blood loss. Cancer, kidney failure and certain chronic diseases
can also lead to anemia.
The study - published online
July 31 in Neurology - should remind
doctors that many conditions can lead to dementia, and treating them might ward
off mental decline, one expert said.
"One concern about the
increased visibility and prevalence of Alzheimer's disease is that some physicians
will be tempted to jump straight to that diagnosis without first having
followed the 'rule out reversible causes' rule," said Dr. Sam Gandy,
director of the Mount Sinai Center for Cognitive Health in New York City.
Alzheimer's disease is the most common form of dementia.
"We must always seek to
exclude treatable, reversible causes of dementia such as depression,
nutritional deficiencies, endocrine disorders and metabolic disorders before
rushing into a diagnosis of Alzheimer's," he said.
During the study, all of the
participants were tested for anemia and took memory and thinking tests over 11
years.
Almost 400 participants were
anemic at the study's start. Over the course of the study, about 18 percent of
participants - 455 - developed dementia, the researchers found.
Of participants with anemia, 23
percent developed dementia, compared with 17 percent of those who weren't
anemic.
People who were anemic at the
study's start had a 41 percent higher risk of developing dementia than those
without anemia after the researchers took into account factors such as age,
race, sex and education.
Additional research is needed
to confirm this association before recommendations are made regarding dementia
prevention, the study authors suggested.
(Source: HealthDay.com, 31 July 2013)
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