Abstract
The objective of the study was to assess risk factors for Alzheimer's disease, previously reported in cases control studies from other countries. It was conducted in a psychiatric of unit for the elderly in Warrington, a town in the northwest of England. A retrospective hospital-based, case control method was used comparing 198 cases of Alzheimer's disease (ADRDANINCDS diagnostic criteria) to selected controls (164 other dementias and 176 non-dementing group) in respect of their family, medical and personal histories.The subjects included all patients referred to and seen by the author during a two-year study period. Fifty-eight of 198 Alzheimer's cases reported family history of dementia, compared with 35 of 340 controls (OR=3.27 95% CI 1.89–5.39), p <0.01. The Odds ratio for smoking was 0.68; significant only in men (0.45, p <0.05). The odds ratio for having a history of head injury was 1.52 (0.98–2.35), also significant only in male patients (OR=2.1, p <0.05). The study confirms a family history of dementia in first-degree relatives as a risk factor for Alzheimer's disease. No cases with either Down's syndrome or having family history of it were reported in the study sample. Previously reported head injury as a risk factor appears to apply to all dementias and was not confined to Alzheimer's disease. The inverse relationship with smoking was evident, but significant only in men.
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