Loneliness Linked to Preclinical Alzheimer’s Disease

Published On: November 14, 20161 min read
An elderly person with white hair wipes their eyes with a tissue while adjusting their glasses, capturing a quiet moment that hints at the loneliness often experienced by those living with Alzheimer’s. The image is in black and white.

Loneliness in cognitively normal older adults may actually be an early manifestation of Alzheimer’s disease, according to new research based on data from the Harvard Aging Brain Study.

Loneliness may be associated with significant amyloid deposits, “suggesting that loneliness is a neuropsychiatric symptom relevant to preclinical Alzheimer’s disease,” reports MedPage Today.

People who were classified as amyloid-positive were 75 times more likely to identify themselves as lonely sometimes or often than those who were amyloid-negative.

The link between higher amyloid levels and loneliness was stronger in older adults who carry a gene with a high Alzheimer’s disease risk factor than those without that gene. “Loneliness, characterized by subtle feelings of social detachment, may be associated with early brain changes in preclinical Alzheimer disease, prior to mild cognitive impairment,” write the researchers.

Source: http://www.argentum.org/News/5242/Loneliness%2DLinked%2Dto%2DPreclinical%2DAlzheimers%2DDisease