People with a high level of education who complain about memory lapses have a higher risk for stroke, according to new research in the American Heart Association journal Stroke.
“Studies have shown how stroke causes memory complaints,” said Arfan Ikram, M.D., associate professor of neuroepidemiology at Erasmus University Rotterdam in The Netherlands. “Given the shared underlying vascular pathology, we posed the reverse question: ‘Do memory complaints indicate an increased risk of strokes?’”
As part of the Rotterdam Study (1990-93 and 2000-01), 9,152 participants 55 or older completed a subjective memory complaints questionnaire and took the Mini-Mental State Examination.
By 2012, 1,134 strokes occurred: 663 were ischemic, 99 hemorrhagic and 372 unspecified.
Subjective memory complaints was independently associated with a higher risk of stroke, but a higher MMSE score wasn’t.
Furthermore, those with memory complaints had a 39 percent higher risk of stroke if they also had a higher level of education. The finding is comparable to the association between subjective memory complaints and Alzheimer’s disease among highly educated people.
“Given the role of education in revealing subjective memory complaints, we investigated the same association but in three separate groups: low education, medium education and high education,” Ikram said. “We found that the association of memory complaints with stroke was strongest among people with the highest education. If in future research we can confirm this, then I would like to assess whether people who complain about changes in their memory should be considered primary targets for further risk assessment and prevention of stroke.”
Researchers categorized level of education into three groups: low education – primary education only; intermediate education – primary education plus some higher education, lower vocational education, intermediate vocational education, or general secondary education; and high education – higher vocational education or university training.
The study results apply evenly to men and women. With more than 95 percent of study participants being Caucasians living in Rotterdam, future studies should include more racially diverse groups, Ikram said.
A stroke occurs when a blood vessel that carries oxygen and nutrients to the brain is either blocked by a clot or bursts (or ruptures). When that happens, part of the brain cannot get the blood (and oxygen) it needs, so it and brain cells die. According to the American Stroke Association, about 795,000 Americans had a new or recurrent stroke each year. For more about stroke risk and prevention, visit strokeassociation.org.
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Maybe the link is not with the higher education. With higher education come more stressful jobs and maybe this is where the link is
Thank you AHA for the study.
All I can say is it’s a good thing I don’t live in Rotterdam! I have been to Rotterdam and it is my opinion that their lifestyle is so different than mine this study is useless except to inhabitants of Holland. I am 78, I have memory problems but I just had a complete workup by a cardiologist where he gave me a clean bill of health.