Widespread Pain Raises Risk of Dementia and Stroke
/By Pat Anson, PNN Editor
Widespread body pain caused by fibromyalgia and other chronic pain conditions raises the risk of stroke and dementia, including Alzheimer’s disease, according to a new study.
Researchers looked at health data for nearly 2,500 second generation participants in the long-running, community-based Framingham Heart Study. Participants in the “offspring” phase of the study were given a comprehensive check-up that included a physical exam, lab tests and detailed pain assessment when they enrolled in the early 1990’s. They were then reassessed every four years for signs of cognitive decline, dementia or stroke.
Over the next two decades, 188 of the participants were diagnosed with some form of dementia and 139 had a stroke.
While the number of cases was small, researchers found an association between pain and cognitive decline. Participants with widespread pain were 43% more likely to have some type of dementia, 47% more likely to have Alzheimer’s disease, and 29% more likely to have a stroke compared to those without widespread pain (WSP).
“These findings provide convincing evidence that WSP may be a risk factor for all-cause dementia, AD dementia (Alzheimer’s), and stroke,” researchers concluded. “While it is known that chronic pain or persistent pain without detailed classification is associated with poorer cognitive performance in cross-sectional or cohort studies, our study was based on much more accurate assessments for pain at a longitudinal population level. The specific presence of WSP… has long-term implications for dementia and AD.”
The researchers said there were three possible explanations for the link between pain and cognitive decline. First are lifestyle factors associated with pain, such as reduced physical activity, poor diet, alcohol and weight gain. Second is that stress caused by widespread pain may impair cognitive function; and third is that WSP may be a “preclinical phase” of dementia and AD.
Previous studies have also linked chronic pain to dementia. A large 2017 study found that older people with chronic pain experience faster declines in memory and are more likely to develop dementia. A more recent study suggests that people with chronic pain are at higher risk of memory loss and cognitive decline if they have lower levels of education, income and access to healthcare.
Antidepressants, anti-psychotics, antihistamines and other common medications may also cause confusion and disorientation that is mistaken for dementia, especially in older adults. When patients are taken off the drugs, their cognitive function may improve.
Previous studies have also linked widespread pain to cancer, peripheral arterial disease, cardiovascular disease and increased mortality.