Living Well 60+ March – April 2016 | Page 28

28 MARCH/APRIL 2016 Framingham Research Links Heart Health with Dementia Decline Study that started in 1948 still providing data by Dr. Tom Miller, Staff Writer One of the most well-respected studies on health and wellness is the Framingham Heart Study, under the direction of the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI), formerly known as the National Heart Institute. What makes this study so unique is that it started in 1948 with a focus on identifying the common factors and characteristics that contribute to cardiovascular disease. Its initial subjects were 5,209 men and women between the ages of 30 and 62 from the town of Framingham, Mass. None had yet developed overt symptoms of cardiovascular disease or suffered a heart attack or stroke. Over time, the study has added the original subjects’ offspring. This enrollment and examination of a third generation of participants will provide greater resources on phenotypic and genotypic information. Taking a step further in 1994, the researchers included men and women of African American, Hispanic, Asian, Indian, Pacific Islander and Native American origins who at the time of enrollment were residents of Framingham and the surrounding towns. Recruitment of New Offspring Spouses (NOS) began in October 2003, and all groups continue into 2016. Most significant to an aging population is the fact that current scientists and research clinicians have access to the Framingham data. Over the years, careful monitoring of the study population has led to the identification of major risk factors as well as valuable information on the effects these factors have on blood pressure, blood triglyceride and cholesterol levels, age, gender and psychosocial issues. These findings suggest projections of increasing incidences of dementia in the coming decades may be less burdensome than expected, and education and lifestyle changes may help reduce the risk. Researchers at Boston University Sch