In several studies, researchers at the Sahlgrenska Academy of Gothenburg University have previously analysed Swedish men's conscription results and were able to show a correlation between cardiovascular fitness as a teenager and health problems in later life.
In the new study, based on data from 1.1 million young Swedish men, the team showed that those with poorer cardiovascular fitness and/or lower IQ in their teenage years more often suffer from early-onset dementia.
The study found that men who when conscripted had poorer cardiovascular fitness were 2.5 times more likely to develop early-onset dementia later in life.
A lower IQ entailed a 4 times greater risk, and a combination of both poor cardiovascular fitness and low IQ entailed a 7 times greater risk of early-onset dementia.
"We already knew that physical and cognitive exercise reduces the risk of neurological disease. Physical exercise increases nerve cell complexity and function and even generation of new nerve cells in the adult brain, which strengthens our mental and physiological functions," said Georg Kuhn, senior author of the study.
"In other words, good cardiovascular fitness makes the brain more resistant to damage and disease," Kuhn said.