眼睛疾病和失智症之間的關係最近變得很重要,特別是在神經科學和眼科研究中。很多研究發現,某些視力問題可能會增加失智症的風險。例如,一項基於英國生物樣本庫的研究發現,白內障和血管性失智症之間有很強的關聯性,並且視力變差可能和阿茲海默症等不同類型的失智症有關。
眼睛疾病和失智症之間的關係最近變得很重要,特別是在神經科學和眼科研究中。很多研究發現,某些視力問題可能會增加失智症的風險。例如,一項基於英國生物樣本庫的研究發現,白內障和血管性失智症之間有很強的關聯性,並且視力變差可能和阿茲海默症等不同類型的失智症有關。
該研究採用了基因隨機化(Mendelian randomization)的方法,探討白內障、近視等視力問題與失智症之間的潛在聯繫。結果顯示,在基因層面,白內障的風險顯著增加血管性失智症的風險,甚至高達92%的增幅。此外,研究亦指出,患有白內障的受試者其全腦體積及灰質體積均顯著減少,暗示白內障可能加速大腦萎縮過程,進而影響認知功能。這些結果強調了眼睛健康在維持大腦結構與功能中的潛在角色,促使我們進一步探討改善視力健康是否可以作為預防失智症的一種策略。
儘管近視等眼睛疾病未必直接與失智症風險相關,視力變差(如視力低於20/40)的受試者罹患失智症的風險卻顯著增加。這暗示,改善視力或延緩視力退化可能對降低失智症風險具有潛在幫助。視力衰退不僅影響日常生活的便利性,還可能對社交參與和心理健康產生不利影響,而這些因素均可能進一步加速認知功能的退化。因此,視力保健對於減少失智症風險的重要性不容忽視。
上述研究結果對公共衛生具有重大意義,特別是在白內障作為可通過手術治療的眼疾時。白內障手術是一種相對安全且有效的干預手段,不僅能顯著改善視力,還可能有助於減緩認知功能衰退。視力與失智症之間的潛在關聯,進一步凸顯了眼科檢查和視力矯正手術在老年健康管理中的重要性。對於老年人群體,定期進行眼科檢查,及早發現並治療視力問題(如進行白內障手術),可能對於預防或延緩失智症的發展具有關鍵作用。這不僅有助於提高老年人的生活質量,還可減少醫療系統和社會福利系統的負擔。
除了白內障,其他眼疾如糖尿病性視網膜病變、青光眼及老年性黃斑部病變等,也可能對大腦健康產生不利影響,並增加失智症的風險。這些眼科疾病的共同特點在於其對視覺中樞的影響以及可能引發的慢性炎症反應,這些因素均可能促進神經退行性變化的發生。因此,未來的研究應繼續深入探討這些眼睛疾病與失智症之間的病理機制,並進一步確認通過視力篩檢與適當治療是否能有效降低失智症風險。這些研究將有助於深化我們對眼睛健康與大腦健康之間相互作用的理解,並為制定有效的失智症預防策略提供科學依據。
JAMA Netw Open. 2024 Jul 30;7(7):e2424539. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.24539
Visual Impairment, Eye Conditions, and Diagnoses of Neurodegeneration and Dementia
Erin L Ferguson 1,✉, Mary Thoma 1, Peter T Buto 1,2, Jingxuan Wang 1, M Maria Glymour 2, Thomas J Hoffmann 1, Hélène Choquet 3, Shea J Andrews 4, Kristine Yaffe 1,4,5, Kaitlin Casaletto 5, Willa D Brenowitz 1,6
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PMCID: PMC11289698 PMID: 39078629
See commentary "Visual Deficit Related to Cataracts-A Potential Modifiable Risk Factor for Vascular Dementia." on page e2424518.
Key Points
Question
Are eye conditions and visual acuity risk factors for Alzheimer disease (AD) and related dementias?
Findings
In this cohort study of 304 953 UK Biobank participants, cataracts were associated with lower total gray matter volume, white matter hyperintensities, and increased risk of dementia, especially vascular dementia. Mendelian randomization analyses estimated that cataracts were associated with a 92% increase in the odds of vascular dementia risk; although poor visual acuity was associated with an increased risk of dementia, myopia was not associated with dementia in genetic analyses.
Meaning
These results suggest that cataracts increase the risk of dementia through vascular and non-AD mechanisms; treating or preventing cataracts may reduce dementia risk.
Abstract
Importance
Vision and eye conditions are associated with increased risk for Alzheimer disease and related dementias (ADRDs), but the nature of the association and the underlying biological pathways remain unclear. If causal, vision would be an important modifiable risk factor with viable population-level interventions.
Objective
To evaluate potentially causal associations between visual acuity, eye conditions (specifically cataracts and myopia), neuroimaging outcomes, and ADRDs.
Design, Setting, and Participants
A cohort and 2-sample bidirectional mendelian randomization (MR) study was conducted using UK Biobank participants and summary statistics from previously published genome-wide association studies on cataract, myopia, and AD. The participants included in the analysis were aged 55 to 70 years without dementia at baseline (calendar years 2006 to 2010), underwent genotyping, and reported on eye conditions; a subset completed visual acuity examinations (n = 69 852-71 429) or brain imaging (n = 36 591-36 855). Data were analyzed from August 15, 2022, through November 28, 2023.
Exposure
Self-reported cataracts, visual acuity, and myopia measured by refraction error.
Main Outcomes and Measures
ADRD, AD, and vascular dementia were identified from electronic medical records. Total and regional brain volumes were determined using magnetic resonance imaging.
Results
The sample included 304 953 participants (mean [SD] age, 62.1 (4.1) years; 163 825 women [53.72%]); 14 295 (4.69%) had cataracts and 2754 (3.86%) had worse than 20/40 vision. Cataracts (hazard ratio [HR], 1.18; 95% CI, 1.07-1.29) and myopia (HR, 1.35; 95% CI, 1.06-1.70) were associated with a higher hazard of ADRD. In MR analyses to estimate potential causal effects, cataracts were associated with increased risk of vascular dementia (inverse variance-weighted odds ratio [OR], 1.92; 95% CI, 1.26-2.92) but were not associated with increased dementia (OR, 1.21; 95% CI, 0.98-1.50). There were no associations between myopia and dementia. In MR for potential reverse causality, AD was not associated with cataracts (inverse variance–weighted OR, 0.99; 95% CI, 0.96-1.01). Genetic risk for cataracts was associated with smaller total brain (β = −597.43 mm3; 95% CI, −1077.87 to −117.00 mm3) and gray matter (β = −375.17 mm3; 95% CI, −680.10 to −70.24 mm3) volumes, but not other brain regions.
Conclusions and Relevance
In this cohort and MR study of UK Biobank participants, cataracts were associated with increased risk of dementia, especially vascular dementia, and reduced total brain volumes. These findings lend further support to the hypothesis that cataract extraction may reduce the risk for dementia.
This cohort study examines visual acuity and eye conditions in individuals with genetic risk for Alzheimer disease and related dementias.
Introduction
Visual impairment and ocular disease are emerging as potential modifiable risk factors for Alzheimer disease (AD) and related dementias (ADRDs).1 Self-reported vision impairment,2,3 eye conditions such as cataracts,4,5 and poor visual acuity6,7,8 are associated with an increased risk of dementia. If causal, this association would be clinically meaningful; some vision impairments can be reversed or corrected. For example, observational studies have reported that cataract surgery is associated with a decreased risk of dementia.4,9
Establishing the causality of this association is methodologically difficult. Both vision impairment and ADRDs can develop slowly over decades, they share risk factors,10,11 and early ADRDs could affect visual processing (reverse causation).12 Additionally, previous studies are observational and may be affected by unmeasured confounding by social or other health factors13,14,15 or confounding by indication.16 Alternative approaches are needed to inform whether vision care could delay the onset of ADRD.
Genetic variants associated with eye conditions or AD17,18,19 can be leveraged to estimate causal associations, because genetic variants are likely independent of key confounders. Mendelian randomization (MR) uses genetic variants, single-nucleotide variants (SNVs), as instruments, allowing for an unbiased estimate of causal effect, provided certain assumptions are met.20,21 Few studies have used MR methods to evaluate associations between vision impairments and dementia. One study reported null findings for the association between cataracts and AD; however, this study did not examine vision impairments or dementia more broadly.22 Furthermore, previous studies have not investigated related indicators of ADRD, such as neuroimaging markers, which would provide convergent evidence and elucidate biological pathways.
We evaluated the possible associations between visual impairment, cataracts, and ADRD in the UK Biobank (UKB). With recent interest in visual acuity23 and cataracts9 as dementia risk factors, we focused our genetic analyses on cataracts and myopia. With MR, we first used genetic risk for AD to evaluate whether shared genetics or incipient AD increases the risk of later vision impairment or eye conditions (Figure 1A). Second, we used genetic risk for eye conditions (cataracts and myopia) to evaluate whether incipient eye conditions increase the risk of ADRD, vascular dementia (VaD), or AD (Figure 1B). Third, to explore biological pathways, we evaluated eye conditions and brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) outcomes.