BRAIN BUSTER

Scientists pinpoint personality traits that increase your risk of Alzheimer’s

FROM kind to selfish, funny or shy - we all hold dozens of personality traits that make us unique.

They could help predict the risk of dementia, a memory-destroying disease that strikes millions in old age, scientists say.

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The Big Five personality typesCredit: Getty

There are currently around 850,000 people with dementia in the UK, projected to rise to 1.6 million by 2040.

There is no cure for the disease, for which Alzhiemer’s is the most common form (75 per cent).

But finding out what raises the risk can help people try and prevent it.

A new study has offered more clues about the type of people who typically get Alzheimer's.

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Researchers looked at the Big Five personality types that are familiar among mental health experts.

They are:

  • Conscientiousness: This describes someone who is responsible, careful, and goal- and detail-oriented. They have high impulse control and tend to be organised
  • Agreeableness: This describes a person who is respectful, compassionate, trusting and tries to avoid problems. They tend to be more cooperative and are helpful 
  • Neuroticism: This describes someone who gravitates toward unsettling emotions, such as anxiety and depression. They get upset easily 
  • Openness: This describes a person who is open to new experiences and curious about the world. They are creative and happy to talk about abstract ideas
  • Extraversion or Extroversion: This describes someone who seeks excitement and is active and highly sociable. They are talkative, have a lot of emotional expressiveness and are energised around others

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Some 3,000 participants of a study called Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging (BLSA) completed an extensive personality quiz and a year later, had imaging of their brains.

The brain scans showed if there was a buildup of proteins in the brain, which are linked with cell death and memory loss over time.

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Tau creates tangles within a brain cell, while amyloid creates plaques around the cell.

The results of the study showed that one personality type, neuroticism, was shown to have an increased risk of protein build-up.

But being conscientious reduced the likelihood.

The findings were backed up with a review of 12 existing studies that investigated the link between personality traits and dementia

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