It’s common to lose hearing or vision as you age, but the loss of both can have serious consequences. A new study found that hearing and vision loss put you at double the risk of developing dementia later in life. 1
The study involved 6,520 people ages 58 to 101. Participants reported their vision and hearing on the following scale:
- Normal.
- Reduced, able to function with a hearing aid or glasses.
- Reduced, unable to function even with a hearing aid or glasses.
- No hearing or sight at all.
At the beginning of the study, 932 participants had normal hearing and vision, 2,957 had either hearing or vision loss, and 2,631 had hearing and vision loss. Questionnaires revealed that dementia was more than twice as common in the group with dual sensory impairment (8%) than those with single sensory impairment (2.4%) or no sensory impairment (2.3%).
Every two years, for a total of six years, researchers tested thinking and memory skills. The six-year follow-up revealed that 245 people developed dementia. 146 of the 1,964 people with both impairments developed dementia compared to 69 of the 2,396 people with one impairment and 14 of the 737 with no impairment.
These results revealed that individuals with hearing and vision loss were twice as likely to develop dementia than the other groups.
“Older people with only a visual or hearing impairment can usually still maintain social contact, so they may not feel as isolated or depressed as people who have both,” explained study author JinHyeong Jhoo, M.D., Ph.D. “However, when someone has both impairments, that may increase the risk of isolation and depression, which previous research has found may affect dementia risk and thinking skills later on.”
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1 Byeon, G., et al. Dual sensory impairment and cognitive impairment in the Korean longitudinal elderly cohort. In Neurology. Published online April 07, 2021. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000011845