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Eight things you can do now that might reduce your odds of dementia later

Smoking and diabetes have been linked to Alzheimer’s disease. (May 19, 2017) (Sign up for our free video newsletter here http://bit.ly/2n6VKPR)

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It’s a safe bet that you’d like to avoid getting Alzheimer’s. But you probably haven’t done the one thing that could make you five times more likely to reach the age of 85 without getting the disease and 7.5 times more likely to have suffered no memory loss or other major cognitive decline.

Don’t kick yourself. The only way you could have achieved this spectacular risk reduction was to be born with a genetic variant that’s been found in fewer than 0.5% of people studied.

So researchers are looking for other, more feasible risk-reduction strategies. Scientists generally agree that you can get pretty far in warding off dementia by adopting a healthful lifestyle. What’s good for your body seems to be good for your brain, too.

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A caveat: The evidence isn’t mind-blowing. In fact, in 2010 the National Institutes of Health decided not to make specific recommendations for reducing Alzheimer’s risk because they couldn’t find enough solid data to back any particular strategy. A 2015 review of ways to reduce age-related cognitive decline found measurable benefits of following a Mediterranean diet, practicing tai chi, taking soy isoflavone supplements and engaging in cognitive training, but the effects were small. (Similar preventive strategies are often proposed for cognitive decline and dementia, says Dr. Victor Henderson, director of the Stanford Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center and a coauthor of the review.)

A more encouraging finding came from a 2014 review by the Alzheimer’s Assn. on cognitive decline and dementia. Unlike the other two reports, this one looked not just at gold-standard clinical trials but at population studies as well. It acknowledged the need for more research, but also decided that certain recommendations are justifiable — even urgent.

Here are some of them:

Don’t just sit there

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Evidence suggests that physical activity may make your brain more active too, perhaps because its oxygen supply goes up along with your heartbeat. The National Institute on Aging is collaborating with the YMCA on a clinical trial that will enroll 300 people between the ages of 65 and 89 to pin down whether — and how — staying physically fit can help you stay mentally fit.

Food for thought

How well you eat really can affect how well you think. For brain food, the smart money may be on a Mediterranean diet. That means lots of fruits, vegetables, whole grains, seafood, nuts and olive oil, and limited amounts of red meat and solid fats.

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This is your brain on tobacco

Heavy smoking may double your odds of dementia.
(ERIC FEFERBERG / AFP/Getty Images)

If you smoke a lot in middle age, you can double your odds of developing dementia. So concluded one large study, and it was far from alone in linking smoking — which leads to a thinning of the brain’s cortex — to cognitive decline. If you need another reason not to smoke, there it is.

Don’t skimp on sleep

Sleep may seem like a waste of time — you have things to do! — but don’t be fooled. While you’re sleeping, your brain is busy cleaning up after itself, getting rid of stuff it doesn’t need that has piled up during the day. This trash includes proteins like beta-amyloid and tau, which have been linked to Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia.

More things to avoid

Keep blood pressure under control to reduce dementia risk.
(stockvisual / Getty Images/iStockphoto)

Numerous studies have linked diabetes with dementia and cognitive decline. If you don’t have diabetes, take every precaution not to get it; if you already have it, take every precaution to control it. Evidence is more mixed with respect to obesity and high blood pressure, but, really, who needs those anyway?

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Don’t worry. Be happy.

Happiness is healthy -- for the brain.
(Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times)

This can seem impossible at times, and that’s when it’s so important to get help. Being stressed or depressed weighs on your mind, and over time it can drag down your overall cognitive functioning.

Can you be too self-reliant?

Spending time with friends can help keep you mentally engaged.
(Jenna Schoenefeld / For the Times)

“Loners don’t do well,” says Dr. Gary Small, director of the UCLA Longevity Center. Like many experts, Small believes that staying socially engaged is vital to staying mentally engaged. Still, the Alzheimer’s Assn. review did note that it’s hard to separate social engagement from other possible mitigating factors such as physical activity — say, people chatting while sharing a walk.

Give your brain a workout

Keep your brain in shape with mental challenges.
(Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times)

It’s well-established that the more years of formal education you have, the less likely you are to get dementia. But don’t stop there, says James Hendrix, director of global science initiatives at the Alzheimer’s Assn.: “Be a lifelong learner.” Studies suggest it pays to train your brain just about whenever and however you can. Work puzzles. Build a bookcase from ridiculously complex instructions. Read “War and Peace.” And don’t specialize. Make your brain stay on its toes!

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So if you want to keep your wits about you, keep up those healthful habits — the ones you’re so dutiful about already, right?

And if you’re not, it’s never too late to start. It’s never too early either. True, definitive evidence is lacking. But as Small puts it, “I don’t want to wait 10 years just to find out I should have been doing these things all along.”

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