Glucose Levels and Risk of Dementia
University of Washington · Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute · +5 more institutions
Abstract
Diabetes is a risk factor for dementia. It is unknown whether higher glucose levels increase the risk of dementia in people without diabetes.
We used 35,264 clinical measurements of glucose levels and 10,208 measurements of glycated hemoglobin levels from 2067 participants without dementia to examine the relationship between glucose levels and the risk of dementia. Participants were from the Adult Changes in Thought study and included 839 men and 1228 women whose mean age at baseline was 76 years; 232 participants had diabetes, and 1835 did not. We fit Cox regression models, stratified according to diabetes status and adjusted for age, sex, study cohort, educational level, level of exercise, blood pressure, and status with respect to coronary and cerebrovascular diseases, atrial fibrillation, smoking, and treatment for hypertension.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 43.36
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 28
Authors
14Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Dementia
- Diabetes mellitus
- Glycated hemoglobin
- Hazard ratio
- Internal medicine
- Liter
- Confidence interval
- Good health and well-being