Nightmares in your 40s or 50s may be a dementia warning sign, study claims
Nightmares in your 40s or 50s may be a dementia warning sign, study claims
- The University of Birmingham researchers said their findings were ‘important’
- They could help spot patients in the ‘earliest stages’ of dementia, team claimed
- Dementia affects roughly 850,000 people in Britain and 6million in the US
Dementia may be lurking around the corner for middle-aged adults who regularly experience nightmares, a study suggests.
Researchers say bad dreams become common in the years — and potentially even decades — before memory loss kicks in.
The University of Birmingham team said their findings were ‘important’, and could help spot patients in the ‘earliest stages’ of dementia.
Researchers say bad dreams become common in the years — and potentially even decades — before memory loss kicks in
Dr Abidemi Otaiku, lead researcher, said: ‘Very few risk indicators for dementia can be identified as early as middle age.
‘While more works needs to be done to confirm these links, we believe bad dreams could be a useful way to identify individuals at high risk.’
This could allow doctors to adopt ‘strategies to slow down the onset of the disease’, he added.
Eating healthily and exercising regularly are just two factors understood to slash the risk of getting the cruel disorder, which affects 850,000 in Britain and 6million in the US.
Although incurable, identifying dementia early can help to slow down the disease’s devastating progression.
The study, published in the journal eClinicalMedicine, consisted of two parts.
Under the first arm of the project, 605 dementia-free adults, aged between 35 and 64, were followed for an average of nine years.
They were asked to complete memory tests at the start of the study, and once again at the end. Volunteers were also quizzed about their sleeping patterns, and whether they experienced nightmares.
Details from the memory tests were used to track how quickly their brain power had deteriorated.
This is known as ‘cognitive decline’, and is a natural consequence of ageing. Faster than expected decline can be a pre-cursor to dementia, however.
More than 2,600 over-80s were involved in the second part of the study. None of the participants had dementia.
They were tracked for five years, on average, and also grilled about their experiences of nightmares.
But instead of being asked to complete memory tests, researchers looked at medical records to determine whether the volunteers had been diagnosed with dementia.
Middle-aged adults who experienced at least two nightmares a week were four times more likely to experience ‘significant’ cognitive decline, compared to those who did not suffer any.
Results also showed over-80s plagued by nightmares were twice as likely to end up being diagnosed with dementia.
Researchers do not believe nightmares — which 5 per cent of adults regularly suffer from — cause dementia.
Instead, they think they may potentially be a by-product of neurodegeneration in the right frontal lobe.
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