“the same part of the brain that’s involved in creating cognitive spatial maps — which we use to navigate the world around us — is also involved in the development of alzheimer’s disease,” said dr. vishal patel, another of the study’s authors and a resident physician in the department of surgery at brigham and women’s hospital.
“we hypothesized that occupations such as taxi driving and ambulance driving, which demand real-time spatial and navigational processing, might be associated with a reduced burden of alzheimer’s disease mortality compared with other occupations.”
jena added: “our results highlight the possibility that neurological changes in the hippocampus or elsewhere among taxi and ambulance drivers may account for the lower rates of alzheimer’s disease.”
still, he cautioned against reading too much into the study. “we view these findings not as conclusive, but as hypothesis-generating,” he said. “but they suggest that it’s important to consider how occupations may affect risk of death from alzheimer’s disease and whether any cognitive activities can be potentially preventive.”
other types of dementia such as vascular dementia — caused by impaired blood flow to the brain — didn’t show the same relationship as alzheimer’s disease, the study found.