Hard physical labor makes dementia more likely

My father died of Parkinson’s disease when he was 83 years old.

He also had Lewy body dementia, a particular type of dementia that shares some typical symptoms of Parkinson’s, including tremors, rigid muscles and motor issues.

Lewy body dementia also involves hallucinations, apathy, incontinence and sleep issues, along with the memory and concentration and language problems you’d expect with dementia.

My dad did hard, physical work all his life. For 35 years he drove a newspaper delivery truck. He tied, lifted and tossed bundles of papers that weighed 10 pounds or more, and worked a highly irregular schedule where he slept all day and went to work around 2 a.m.

So, it really interested me to read about new research that’s making a connection between hard physical labor and the onset of dementia.

Hard physical labor increases dementia risk by 55 percent

A new study from the University of Copenhagen shows that people doing hard physical work have a 55-percent higher risk of developing dementia than those doing sedentary work. And that’s a lot.

Even when the researchers took smoking, blood pressure, overweight, alcohol intake and spare time physical activity into account, hard physical work was associated with an increased occurrence of dementia.

Kirsten Nabe-Nielsen, associate professor from the Department of Public Health at the University of Copenhagen, was the lead author of the study.

“Before the study, we assumed that hard physical work was associated with a higher risk of dementia. It is something other studies have tried to prove, but ours is the first to connect the two things convincingly,” she says.

The study is based on data from the Copenhagen Male Study (CMS), which included 4,721 Danish men, who back in the 1970s reported data on the type of work they did on a daily basis.

Exercise is still beneficial for preventing dementia

The researchers emphasize that, in order to apply these findings to dementia prevention, there needs to be an understanding of the distinction between exercise and hard, physical labor, and what each does to the body.

According to Professor Nabe-Nielsen, previous studies have suggested that hard physical work may have a negative effect on the heart blood circulation, and therefore may negatively affect the blood supply to the brain.

That’s because it often involves continuous exertion — for example, moving heavy loads or lifting power tools — with insufficient time between bouts for the body to recover. That’s exactly the kind of work my father did.

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Exercise with an eye toward physical fitness, on the other hand, is known to improve circulation and prevent dementia.

For example, a Swedish study found that women who had a high fitness level at middle age were almost 90 percent less likely to develop dementia.

The takeaway

The National Research Centre for the Working Environment in Denmark is a co-author of the study. The Centre is working on finding healthier ways to do hard physical work.

They’re collecting data from people who work at various physically challenging occupations, in an effort to help companies organize hard physical work so that it has more of an “exercise effect,” rather than a detrimental one.

Just as importantly, it matters to find the right exercise. According to Professor Nabe-Nielsen, “For example, the WHO guide to preventing dementia and disease, on the whole, mentions physical activity as an important factor. But our study suggests that it must be a ‘good’ form of physical activity, which hard physical work is not. Guides from the health authorities should therefore differentiate between physical activity in your spare time and physical activity at work, as there is reason to believe that the two forms of physical activity have opposite effects,”

For now, it seems like we’d all be wise to pay attention to how much we exert ourselves at work, and to building in “downtime” for our bodies to recover, as much as we can.

And, of course, remaining physically active off the job, keeping our cardiovascular health in mind, is still a way to lower our dementia risk.

Sources:

Hard Physical Work Significantly Increases the Risk of Dementia — Neuroscience News

The effect of occupational physical activity on dementia: Results from the Copenhagen Male Study — Scandinavian Journal of Medicine and Science in Sports

Could hard physical labor increase dementia risk? — Medical News Today

Joyce Hollman

By Joyce Hollman

Joyce Hollman is a writer based in Kennebunk, Maine, specializing in the medical/healthcare and natural/alternative health space. Health challenges of her own led Joyce on a journey to discover ways to feel better through organic living, utilizing natural health strategies. Now, practicing yoga and meditation, and working towards living in a chemical-free home, her experiences make her the perfect conduit to help others live and feel better naturally.

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