Researchers still aren’t completely sure why smoking affects brain function. But smoking is known to cause inflammation and oxidative stress — cell damage from toxic free radicals in the body — conditions that are associated with the onset of Alzheimer’s, she said.
“If you are an elderly person who smokes, and you’re lucky enough to not have cardiovascular disease, respiratory disease or cancer, you’re still at a greater risk of dementia throughout late life,” Whitmer said.
The new study was published online today (Oct. 25) in the journal Archives of Internal Medicine.
Up in smoke
In the study, 21,123 California residents ages 50 to 60 participated in a health survey from 1978 to 1985, in which they indicated whether they had never never smoked, or were former or current smokers.
Researchers followed up with them about 23 years later, between 1994 and 2008, and found that 5,367 of the people, or 25.4 percent, had been diagnosed with dementia. Of those , 1,136 were diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease and 416 were diagnosed with vascular dementia.
Researchers found that people who smoked more than two packs of cigarettes a day had a higher risk of developing either type of dementia than nonsmokers.
Former smokers, and people who smoked less than half of a pack a day, did not seem to have an increased risk of dementia than nonsmokers, the study said.
Conflicting evidence
Past studies have found a link between smoking and dementia. However, not all of them report the same relationship.
A 2003 study of 218 middle-aged Japanese-American men in the journal Neurobiology of Aging found the more cigarettes a man smoked, the greater his risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease.
But a 10-year study of 1,436 elderly Taiwanese people found past and current smokers were one-third less likely to be cognitively impaired than people who had never smoked. That finding, published in September in the journal Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics, suggested smoking is a protective factor in cognitive function.
That seemingly protective effect may come from nicotine’s action as a stimulant, prompting smokers to perform better on cognitive tests, Whitmer said.
However, that effect was not found in the new study, and was not found among long-term smokers with Alzheimer’s and dementia particularly, she said.
- Understanding the 10 Most Destructive Human Behaviors
- Anatomy of Addiction: Why It’s So Hard to Quit Smoking
- Infographic: Who Still Smokes? Smokers in the U.S. Today
Disclaimer: All the information is collected from different websites and sources