What if you could improve your chances of avoiding stroke, dementia, and depression just by making a few changes in your daily routine?
A new analysis of nearly 60 studies reveals 17 overlapping health and lifestyle factors that influence the risk of these three serious brain-related conditions.
Though these seem like different conditions, they often occur together and that’s not a coincidence. All three are strongly linked to damage in the small blood vessels of the brain. That damage is often caused by poor circulation, inflammation, and other issues related to lifestyle and chronic conditions like high blood pressure or diabetes. So, by addressing the underlying causes, we can protect against all three diseases at once.
The findings, from researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital, suggest that addressing even ONE of these factors can lead to meaningful improvements across multiple areas of brain health.
“If you’re starting to work on one of them, very often you’re actually improving multiple at the same time,” said Dr. Sanjula Singh.
6 Factors That Protect Your Brain
These factors were linked to a lower risk of stroke, dementia, and late-life depression (These are habits or traits that support brain health, mainly by improving blood flow, reducing inflammation, and strengthening brain connections):
- Low alcohol consumption: Less than one drink per day is associated with the greatest benefit.
- Cognitive stimulation: Activities like reading, puzzles, or learning a new skill keep the brain active.
- Healthy diet: Focus on vegetables, fruits, fish, dairy, and nuts.
- Regular physical activity: Moderate to high levels of activity such as walking or gardening are protective.
- A sense of purpose: Feeling motivated and having goals is linked to better brain health.
- Social connection: A strong social network can prevent isolation and mental decline.
13 Risk Factors to Watch Out
The study also identified behaviors and conditions that increase your risk (These are health problems or behaviors that damage the brain over time, especially, the small blood vessels. They increase inflammation, reduce oxygen flow to the brain, or lead to brain shrinkage):
- High blood pressure
- High body mass index (BMI)
- High blood sugar
- High total cholesterol
- Depression symptoms
- Poor diet (high in red meat, sugar, and sodium)
- Hearing loss
- Kidney disease
- Pain that limits physical activity
- Poor sleep (or sleeping over 8 hours regularly)
- Smoking
- Loneliness or isolation
- Ongoing stress or major life trauma
So Why Are There 17 “Ways” to Reduce Risk?
Here’s the key: The researchers found 19 factors total (6 good, 13 bad). BUT two factors “diet and social connection” appear in both categories because they can be either protective or harmful, depending on their quality.
- A healthy diet protects you; a poor diet increases risk.
- A strong social network helps; loneliness hurts.
You’re lowering your risk when you:
- Improve the 6 protective behaviors
- Avoid or manage the 11 harmful ones (out of 13, with 2 already counted above)
Where to Begin? Pick One Area First
Changing 17 habits at once isn’t realistic. Doctors recommend choosing one area to focus on:
- Start with blood pressure: High blood pressure was the strongest individual risk factor for all three conditions. Managing it through diet, exercise, or medication can make a major difference.
- Move more: Moderate exercise like walking or swimming reduces your risk of stroke and dementia and boosts your mood, too.
- Combine brain and social or physical activities (dual-task exercises): Doing puzzles or reading with others brings cognitive and emotional benefits. Social conversation itself is brain exercise!
The Sooner, the Better
Dr. Stephanie Collier of McLean Hospital reminds us that the best time to adopt brain-healthy habits is middle age, not just later in life. But even if you start late, progress is still possible.