Your brain may be aging faster than the rest of your body. While some people maintain brain health well into old age, others experience structural decline much earlier. A recent study found that multiple health factors—including hypertension, diabetes, smoking, and low educational attainment—may speed up brain aging, increasing the risk of cognitive decline and neurodegenerative diseases.
Researchers analyzed brain scans and long-term health data from 964 adults in northern China, monitoring them for 16 years. They used machine learning to estimate brain age based on imaging techniques and compared brain aging among groups with various high-risk health factors. They also focused on people with high blood pressure to see how it affects brain structure.
They found that people with four or five high-risk factors had considerably older-looking brains than those with fewer risks, suggesting that multiple health problems may accelerate brain aging. Hypertension, high blood sugar, elevated creatinine (a feature of metabolic disease), smoking, and lower education were the strongest predictors of brain structure decline. However, hypertension had the strongest link, with hypertensive participants exhibiting more substantial structural deterioration.
These findings suggest maintaining good cardiovascular and metabolic health may help slow brain aging. Hypertension damages the brain’s microvasculature. Learn how exercise preserves these tiny blood vessels, helping to maintain cognitive health.