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Cardiovascular researchReview

06 May 2025

Causal cardiovascular risk factors for dementia: insights from observational and genetic studies.

Abstract

The escalating prevalence of dementia worldwide necessitates preventive strategies to mitigate its extensive health, psychological, and social impacts.

As the prevalence of dementia continues to rise, gaining insights into its risk factors and causes becomes paramount, given the absence of a definitive cure. Cardiovascular disease has emerged as a prominent player in the complex landscape of dementia.

Preventing dyslipidaemia, unhealthy western-type diets, hypertension, diabetes, being overweight, physical inactivity, smoking, and high alcohol intake have the potential to diminish not only cardiovascular disease but also dementia.

The purpose of this review is to present our current understanding of cardiovascular risk factors for Alzheimer's disease and vascular dementia (VaD) by using clinical human data from observational, genetic studies and clinical trials, while elaborating on potential mechanisms.

Hypertension and Type 2 diabetes surface as significant causal risk factors for both Alzheimer's disease and VaD, as consistently illustrated in observational and Mendelian randomization studies.

Anti-hypertensive drugs and physical activity have been shown to improve cognitive function in clinical trials.

Important to note is that robust genome-wide association studies are lacking for VaD, and indeed more and prolonged clinical trials are needed to establish these findings and investigate other risk factors.

Trials should strategically target individuals at the highest dementia risk, identified using risk charts incorporating genetic markers, biomarkers, and cardiovascular risk factors.

Understanding causal risk factors for dementia will optimize preventive measures, and the implementation of well-known therapeutics can halt or alleviate dementia symptoms if started early.

Needless to mention is that future health policies should prioritize primordial prevention from early childhood to prevent risk factors from even occurring in the first place.

Together, understanding the role of cardiovascular risk factors in dementia, improving genome-wide association studies for VaD, and advancing clinical trials are crucial steps in addressing this significant public health challenge.

COI Statement

Conflict of interest: none declared.

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Article info

Journal issue:

  • Volume: 121
  • Issue: 4

Doi:

10.1093/cvr/cvae235

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