Why lifestyle may be more important than genetics when it comes to Alzheimer's.

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Why lifestyle may be more important than genetics when it comes to Alzheimer's.
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People often worry they will get Alzheimer’s disease if their parents did. But engaging in a healthy lifestyle can outweigh the impact of genetics for Alzheimer’s disease.

Genetics typically only plays a small role in risk of late-life Alzheimer’s disease. People are often worried they will inevitably contract Alzheimer’s disease if a parent did. But increasingly, scientists have found this is not necessarily the case.

Genetics typically only plays a small role in risk of late-life Alzheimer’s disease.. People are often worried they will inevitably contract Alzheimer’s disease if a parent did. But increasingly, scientists have found this is not necessarily the case.Processes in our bodies are regulated by genes, but not everyone has exactly the same version of each gene. These different versions are called. Different alleles carry different risks for physical conditions in the body, including Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias. One of the most strongly replicated findings for genetic risk of Alzheimer’s disease in late life involves the APOE gene, and the ε4 allele. You have two alleles for every gene. For the APOE gene, you may have the ε2, ε3, or ε4 alleles. The ε2 allele appears to be protective; people who carry it are less likely to develop Alzheimer’s disease. Having one allele with ε4 increases your risk, however, and having both alleles with ε4 raises it even more., but in general, it is much less common than ε3 . Moreover, the APOE alleles are only risk and protection factors; they do not determine whether you get the disease. Even people with the highest risk—double ε4—only develop Alzheimer’s disease about 40% to 60% of the time by age 80. This chart presents a simplified example of the distribution of the alleles and the likelihood of developing Alzheimer’s disease by age 80. This chart is based on multiple studies; actual rates differ by age,A disclaimer: Early-onset Alzheimer’s disease—which manifests before age 60—has a strong genetic influence. The early form is relatively rare. For example, fewer than 1 in 100,000 adults in their 40s have Alzheimer’s disease. This genetic influence is evident in the extended Paisa family in Colombia, with 6,000 related individuals. They have a very high rate of early-onset Alzheimer’s disease, starting in their 40s. The disease is tied to a mutation in thegene ; sometimes called the Paisa mutation. Individuals with this mutation will almost certainly develop early-onset Alzheimer’s disease. Nevertheless, scientists recently discovered one of the Paisa family members who had the mutation but did not have Alzheimer’s disease at age 60, lending additional support for the possibility of protective non-genetic factors.You may be thinking, “Wow. That seems so easy. All they have to do is fix one allele on one gene.” Turns out APOE isn’t the full story. Yes, scientists have found the increased risk with E4. But scholars are also working on. That means that multiple-gene constellations are involved, well beyond APOE alleles. Each gene alone may add only a small amount of risk, but collectively a set of genes may contribute to a measurable increase in risk. GWAS shows that dementia risk is usually due to combinations of many genes, each with a small effect, rather than a single gene acting alone. Together, these genes can increase risk, much like, where no single ingredient explains the final result by itself. Some of these genes are associated with inflammation, and how the brain handles fats that play a key role in the maintenance of neurons . Other genes are involved in endosomal/lysosomal function, how the brain keeps abnormal proteins from building up. Although many genes are involved in setting risk for Alzheimer’s disease, the vast research on the APOE ε4 allele lays the groundwork for understanding the functions of genes in the risk of dementias.. Epigenetics is how your body uses your genes—like turning a dimmer switch up or down—without changing the gene itself. That process is called gene expression. When people experienceIf someone carries APOE ε4 or other dementia-risk genes, those genes don’t act in isolation. Being sedentary, eating highly processed foods, chronic stress, poor sleep, and metabolic problems can influence epigenetic changes—chemical tags that turn certain genes up or down without changing the DNA itself. When these changes lead to overactivation or poor regulation of genes involved in inflammation or cellular repair, the risk of dementia may increase.that people who carry the APOE ε4 allele benefit more than other people from interventions that target prevention of Alzheimer’s disease. Of course, this may partially reflect measurement issues; it is more difficult to show that an intervention was effective when someone was unlikely to develop the disease to begin with. The upshot is that for many people, lifestyle may matter more than whether a mother, sister, or father had Alzheimer’s disease. You still have the ability to influence your lifestyle, and lifestyle continues to play a fundamental role in the development of dementia—particularly for those at greatest risk. . Dietary fats and the APOE ε4 risk allele in relation to cognitive decline: A longitudinal investigation.Loi, K. J., Radtke, N., Kiriluk, C., Noureldein, M. H., Feldman, E. L., Bakulski, K. M., & Chen, K. S. . Shared genes and pathways in dementia: Insights from genome-wide association studies.Qian, J., Wolters, F. J., Beiser, A. S., Haan, M., Ikram, M. A., Karlawish, J., … Bennett, D. A. . APOE-related risk of mild cognitive impairment and dementia for prevention trials: An analysis of four cohorts.Rajabli, F., Benchek, P., Tosto, G., Kushch, N., Sha, J., Bazemore, K., Zhu, C., Lee, W.-P., Haut, J., Hamilton-Nelson, K. L., Wheeler, N. R., Zhao, Y., Farrell, J. J., Grunin, M. A., Leung, Y. Y., Kuksa, P. P., Li, D., da Fonseca, E. L., Mez, J. B., … Alzheimer’s Disease Genetics Consortium. . Multi-ancestry genome-wide meta-analysis of 56,241 individuals identifies known and novel cross-population and ancestry-specific associations as novel risk loci for Alzheimer’s disease., is a professor of human development and family sciences and director of the Texas Aging and Longevity Center at The University of Texas at Austin.Self Tests are all about you. Are you outgoing or introverted? Are you a narcissist? Does perfectionism hold you back? Find out the answers to these questions and more with Psychology Today.

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