NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Developing diabetes before age 65 and greater
severity of diabetes may be important in the development of mild cognitive
impairment among individuals in their 70s and 80s, researchers from the Mayo
Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, report.
The term "mild cognitive impairment" describes a transitional stage between
normal aging and dementia, the researchers explain in a report published today.
Previous studies have shown a link between mild cognitive difficulties and
diabetes. Poor control of blood sugar over time may lead to loss of brain cells,
and diabetes increases the risk of cardiovascular disease and stroke, which also
may increase the risk of cognitive impairment.
Dr. Rosebud O. Roberts and colleagues studied 1,969 people who were between 70
and 89 years old and free of dementia in 2004. A total of 356 of them were
diabetic.
According to the team, rates of diabetes were similar among the 329 individuals
with mild cognitive impairment (20.1 percent) and the 1,640 individuals without
mild cognitive impairment (17.7 percent).
However, mild cognitive impairment was associated with developing diabetes
before age 65, having diabetes for 10 years or longer, being treated with
insulin and having diabetes complications.
Severe diabetes mellitus is more likely to be associated with chronic high blood
sugar, which, in turn, increases the likelihood of disease in the small blood
vessels of the brain and may contribute to brain cell damage and cognitive
impairment, the investigators suggest.
That individuals with the eye disease known as diabetic retinopathy were twice
as likely to have mild cognitive impairment supports the theory that
diabetes-related damage to blood vessels in the brain may contribute to the
development of cognitive problems, they say.
SOURCE: Archives of Neurology, August 11, 2008.