Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology, John Jay College, City University of New York, 529 West 59th Street, New York City, NY,
10019, USA
2. Gertrude H. Sergievsky Center and the Taub Institute for Research in Aging and Alzheimer’s disease,
Columbia University, 710 W 168th St, New York, NY10032, USA
Abstract
Background:
Previous studies have linked childhood adversities to dementia risk, yet
most studies are cross-sectional in design and utilize retrospective self-reports to assess childhood
experiences. These design characteristics make it difficult to establish temporal order and draw
firm conclusions.
Objective:
Using a longitudinal design, we sought to determine whether childhood maltreatment
predicts dementia risk factors in middle adulthood.
Methods:
Data have been obtained from a prospective cohort design study of children with documented
cases of childhood maltreatment (ages 0-11 years at case identification) and demographically
matched controls who were followed up and interviewed in middle adulthood. Outcomes
were assessed through a medical examination and interview, and 807 of the cases that included
blood collection at mean age 41. Dementia risk were investigated using 11 potentially modifiable
risk factors.
Results:
Compared to controls, individuals with histories of childhood maltreatment had a higher
risk of low educational attainment, low social contact, smoking, and clinical depression, and a
higher total number of dementia risk factors. In general, childhood maltreatment predicted a higher
risk of dementia for females, males, and Black and White participants. Black maltreated participants
had a greater risk for traumatic brain injury compared to Black controls. Physical abuse, sexual
abuse, and neglect, each predicted a higher number of dementia risk factors in mid-life.
Conclusion:
These findings provide evidence that childhood maltreatment increases the risk for
dementia in mid-life and has a demonstrable impact lasting over 30 years. Reducing the prevalence
of mid-life dementia risk factors could reduce the risk of later-life dementia.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Neurology (clinical),Neurology
Cited by
1 articles.
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