Quitting Smoking Linked to Slower Cognitive Decline, Even Later in Life
New research โคsuggests thatโ stopping smoking, nonetheless of age,โ is associated with a considerablyโ slower rateโ of cognitive decline and may reduce the risk โคof dementia. A โคstudy analyzing data โfromโ nearly 9,500 individuals across 12 countries found ample โฃcognitiveโ benefits forโค those who quitโ smokingโ compared to those โwho continued.
Researchers at University Collage London (UCL) examinedโข data collected over sixโ years from participants โaged 40 and older (average ageโค 58) inโฃ Spain,Austria,Germany,Sweden,the Netherlands,Italy,France,Denmark,Switzerland,Belgium,the unitedโข States,andโ theโฃ United Kingdom.โ The study, publishedโค in the Lancet Healthyโฃ Longevity, compared cognitive performance between over 4,700 former smokers โขand a comparable group of current smokers, carefully matchingโฃ participants โbased on initial cognitive scores,โข age, gender, education, and country of origin.
Prior โขtoโข cessation, both groups exhibited similar rates of โคdecline inโ cognitive tests โmeasuring memory and verbalโ fluency.However,after the former smokers quit,a clear divergence emerged. โ Over the following six years,thoseโค who had โฃstopped smokingโ experienced โa โ50% slower rate of โขdecline in verbal fluency and โข20% lessโ memory loss compared to those who continued to smoke.This benefit was observed consistently โacross participants from all representedโฃ countries.
Researchers translated โthese findings into a practical timeframe, noting that โformer smokers experienced the equivalent of three toโ four months less memory decline and six months less decline in verbal fluency forโฃ each year of aging, โwhen compared to continuing smokers.
the study builds uponโข decades of established research demonstrating theโข detrimentalโ effects of smoking onโ brain health.โ these effects are linked โto both cardiovascular damageโ – impacting blood โflow to the brain -โค and theโข induction โofโค chronic inflammationโค andโ oxidative stress, processesโ that can destroy neurons. While previous studies showed short-term โขcognitive improvementsโ after quitting, this research confirms those benefits are sustained โover time,โ even โคfor those who โขquit after ageโค 50.
“We already knew that quitting smoking, โeven in old age, brings improvements in physical health and well-being,” stated Mikaelaโ Bloomberg, a researcher at the UCL Institute โof epidemiology and Health.โ “With thisโฃ study, we see that this also helps โคmaintain better cognitive healthโข in the long term, so it’s never too late to quit.”
Andrew Steptoe, a UCL epidemiologist, โfurther emphasized the โคsignificance of the findings, noting that “slower cognitive decline is associated with a lower risk of dementia,” reinforcing the conclusion that quitting smoking โขrepresents a valuable preventative strategy against this disease.