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No significant association was seen for glaucoma surgery with dementia risk in a prospective study involving older adults.
The association was most significant for those aged 65 years or older with a history of hypothyroidism who received medication.
The risk increased in association with age-related macular degeneration, cataract and diabetes-related eye disease, but not glaucoma.
The one-year incidence rate of post-COVID dementia was 12.7% in adults ≥65 years hospitalized with COVID-19.
Even low amount of light-intensity physical activity was linked to a reduced dementia risk compared with total sedentary behavior.
Those with an accelerated versus stable cardiovascular risk trajectory have an increased risk for memory decline.
But evidence suggests that reverse causation may play a role in the links between serum folate deficiency and dementia, all-cause mortality.
Healthy lifestyle in seniors is linked to longer life expectancy and a larger proportion of remaining years spent without Alzheimer’s dementia.
An independent association was seen for tooth loss, with an increased risk for both cognitive decline and dementia.
For people with diabetes, the hazard ratio for dementia was 0.46 for those with a lifestyle score of 7 versus 0 to 2.