This article was taken from: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-48963215
By James GallagherHealth and science correspondent, BBC News
The study of nearly 200,000 people showed the risk fell by up to a third.
The team at the University of Exeter said the results were exciting, empowering and showed people were not doomed to get dementia.
The findings were revealed at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference.
The researchers gave people a healthy lifestyle score based on a combination of exercise, diet, alcohol and smoking.
This is an example of someone who scored well:
Sue Taylor, 62, from Exeter, has seen the impact of dementia on a family – both her mother and grandmother had the disease.
She takes exercise classes in the park three times a week – even in winter – and has a 45-minute walk before work.
“It takes a lot of effort, you have to think about it and make it fit in,” she told me.
But she says it’s worth it, especially for her grandchildren.
“I just want to keep my brain as sharp as possible for as long as possible. I don’t want them to miss out on having grandparents both physically and mentally,” she said.
The study followed 196,383 people from the age of 64 for about eight years.
It analysed people’s DNA to assess their genetic risk of developing the disease.
The study showed there were 18 cases of dementia per 1,000 people if they were born with high risk genes and then led an unhealthy lifestyle.
But that went down to 11 per 1,000 people during the study if those high-risk people had a healthy lifestyle.
The figures might seem small, but that is because your mid-60s are relatively young in terms of dementia.
The researchers say cutting dementia rates by a third would have a profound impact in older age groups where the disease is more common.
“It could equate to hundreds of thousands of people,” Dr David Llewellyn, told the BBC.
Also, this type of research cannot definitively prove that lifestyle causes different risks of dementia. It simply spots patterns in the data.
But the results, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, fit with previous research and World Health Organization advice.
Sadly, you can live the life of a saint and still get the disease. Lifestyle just changes the odds.
However, there are still no drugs to change the course of this disease.
Reducing your chances is all anyone can do.
The findings may not apply to people with very early onset dementia that starts when people are in the 40s and 50s, say the researchers.
But they think their results would apply to people in older age groups when dementia gets more common.
The researchers say the study applies to dementia in general rather than specific forms of the disease like Alzheimer’s or vascular dementia.
“Even if you’re worried about dementia, maybe you’ve got a family history yourself, what our research suggests is it doesn’t matter, Dr David Llewellyn, told the BBC.
“You’re still likely to lower your own risk of dementia substantially if you change to a healthy lifestyle.
“That’s really empowering.”
Fellow researcher Dr Elzbieta Kuzma said it was the first time anyone had shown you could counteract an inherited risk of dementia and the findings were “exciting”.
Fiona Carragher, from the Alzheimer’s Society, commented: “With one person developing dementia every three minutes in the UK, knowing how to lower our dementia risk couldn’t be more vital.
“So hit that salad bar, swap a cocktail for a mocktail and get your exercise kit on!”
Dr Carol Routledge, from Alzheimer’s Research UK, said the findings were “important”.
“This is yet more evidence that there are things we can all do to reduce our risk of developing dementia, yet research suggests that only 34% of adults think that this is possible.
“While we can’t change the genes we inherit, this research shows that changing our lifestyle can still help to stack the odds in our favour.”