Distress-prone people more likely to develop
memory problems
Newswise — People who are
easily distressed and have more negative
emotions are more likely to develop memory
problems than more easygoing people, according
to a study published in the June 12, 2007, issue
of Neurology®, the scientific journal of
the American Academy of Neurology.
In the study, those who
most often experience negative emotions such as
depression and anxiety were 40 percent more
likely to develop mild cognitive impairment than
those who were least prone to negative emotions.
Mild cognitive impairment is a transitional
stage between normal aging and dementia. People
with mild cognitive impairment have mild memory
or cognitive problems, but have no significant
disability.
Researchers analyzed the
results from two larger studies, the Religious
Orders Study and the Memory and Aging Project.
The studies involved 1,256 people with no
cognitive impairment. During up to 12 years of
follow-up, 482 people developed mild cognitive
impairment. Participants were evaluated on their
level of proneness to distress and negative
emotions by rating their level of agreement with
statements such as “I am not a worrier,” “I
often feel tense and jittery,” and “I often get
angry at the way people treat me.”
“People differ in how
they tend to experience and deal with
negative emotions and psychological
distress, and the way people respond tends
to stay the same throughout their adult
lives,” said study author Robert S. Wilson,
PhD, of Rush University Medical Center in
Chicago, IL. “These findings suggest that,
over a lifetime, chronic experience of
stress affects the area of the brain that
governs stress response. Unfortunately, that
part of the brain also regulates memory.”
An earlier study by Wilson
and his colleagues showed that people who are
easily distressed are more likely to develop
Alzheimer’s disease than more easygoing people.
Wilson said several factors
lead researchers to believe that proneness to
stress is a risk factor for memory problems and
not an early sign of disease. For example, while
the level of distress does not appear to
increase in old age, the changes in the brain
related to memory problems and Alzheimer’s
disease do increase with age.
The study was supported by
grants from the National Institute on Aging and
the Illinois Department of Public Health.
The American Academy of
Neurology, an association of more than 20,000
neurologists and neuroscience professionals, is
dedicated to improving patient care through
education and research. A neurologist is a
doctor with specialized training in diagnosing,
treating and managing disorders of the brain and
nervous system such as stroke, Alzheimer’s
disease, epilepsy, Parkinson’s disease, and
multiple sclerosis.
For more information about
the American Academy of Neurology, visit
http://www.aan.com.