New Delhi:Researchers have identified a wide range of risk factors for young-onset dementia, challenging the notion that genes are the sole cause of the condition while laying the groundwork for new prevention strategies.
The large-scale study, published in the journal JAMA Neurology, identified 15 risk factors, which are similar to those for late-onset dementia. For the first time, the researchers indicate that it may be possible to reduce the risk of young-onset dementia, which occurs when a person develops the disorder affecting their memory, thinking, and social abilities before the age of 65, by targeting health and lifestyle factors.
Relatively little research has been done on young-onset dementia, though globally there are around 3.7 lakh new cases of young-onset dementia each year.
The researchers at the University of Exeter in the UK and Maastricht University, Netherlands, followed over 3.5 lakh participants younger than 65 from the UK Biobank study, a large-scale biomedical database containing de-identified genetic, lifestyle, and health information and biological samples from half a million participants.
The team evaluated a broad array of risk factors ranging from genetic predispositions to lifestyle and environmental influences. The study showed that lower formal education, lower socioeconomic status, genetic variation, lifestyle factors such as alcohol use disorder and social isolation, and health issues including vitamin D deficiency, depression, stroke, hearing impairment, and heart disease significantly elevate the risk of young-onset dementia.