Abstract
Introduction: We examined relationships of body mass index (BMI) with cognition in middle-aged adults at Alzheimer's disease (AD) risk due to parental family history. Methods: Participants are offspring of AD patients from the Israel Registry of Alzheimer's Prevention (N = 271). Linear regressions assessed associations of BMI and cognition, and whether associations differed by maternal/paternal history. Analyses of covariance examined associations of long-term trajectories of BMI with cognition. Results: Higher BMI was associated with worse language (P =.045). Interactions of BMI with parental history were significant for episodic memory (P =.023), language (p =.027), working memory (P =.006), global cognition (P =.008); associations were stronger among participants with maternal history. Interactions of BMI trajectories with parental history were significant for episodic memory (P =.017), language (P =.013), working memory (P =.001), global cognition (P =.005), with stronger associations for maternal history. Discussion: Higher BMI and overweight/obese trajectories were associated with poorer cognition in adults with maternal history of AD, but not those with paternal history.
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West, R. K., Ravona-Springer, R., Sharvit-Ginon, I., Ganmore, I., Manzali, S., Tirosh, A., … Beeri, M. S. (2021). Long-term trajectories and current BMI are associated with poorer cognitive functioning in middle-aged adults at high Alzheimer’s disease risk. Alzheimer’s and Dementia: Diagnosis, Assessment and Disease Monitoring, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1002/dad2.12247
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