Women who are anxious, jealous, or moody and distressed in middle age may be at a higher risk of developing Alzheimer's disease later in life, according to a new study.
"Most Alzheimer's research has been devoted to factors such as education, heart and blood risk factors, head trauma, family history and genetics," said study author Lena Johannsson, of the University of Gothenburg, Sweden.
"Personality may influence the individual's risk for dementia through its effect on behaviour, lifestyle or reactions to stress," Johannsson said.
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Neuroticism involves being easily distressed and personality traits such as worrying, jealousy or moodiness. People who are neurotic are more likely to express anger, guilt, envy, anxiety or depression.
Introversion is described as shyness and reserve and extraversion is associated with being outgoing.
The women were also asked if they had experienced any period of stress that lasted one month or longer in their work, health, or family situation.
Stress referred to feelings of irritability, tension, nervousness, fear, anxiety or sleep disturbances. Responses were categorised as zero to five, with zero representing never experiencing any period of stress, to five, experiencing constant stress during the last five years.
Women who chose responses from 3 and 5 were considered to have distress.
The study found that women who scored highest on the tests for neuroticism had double the risk of developing dementia compared to those who scored lowest on the tests. However, the link depended on long-standing stress.
Being either withdrawn or outgoing did not appear to raise dementia risk alone, however, women who were both easily distressed and withdrawn had the highest risk of Alzheimer's disease in the study.
A total of 16 of the 63 women, or 25 per cent, who were easily distressed and withdrawn developed Alzheimer's disease, compared to eight out of the 64 people, or 13 per cent, of those who were not easily distressed and were outgoing.
The study was published in Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.