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Social exposome and brain health outcomes of dementia across Latin America

Nature Communications 2025 8 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 63 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Joaquín Migeot, Stefanie Danielle Piña‐Escudero, Hernán Hernandez, Raúl González-Gómez, Agustina Legaz, Agustina Legaz, Sol Fittipaldi, Elisa de Paula França Resende, Claudia Duran‐Aniotz, José Alberto Ávila‐Funes, María Isabel Behrens, Martín A. Bruno, Juan F. Cardona, Nilton Custodio, Adolfo M. García, Maria Eugenia Godoy, Maria Eugenia Godoy, Kun Hu, Serggio Lanata, Brian Lawlor, Brian Lawlor, Francisco Lopera, Marcelo Adrián Maito, Marcelo Adrián Maito, Diana Matallana, Bruce Miller, Bruce Miller, J. Jaime Miranda, Maira Okada de Oliveira, Maira Okada de Oliveira, Pablo Reyes, Hernando Santamaría‐García, Andrea Slachevsky, Ana Luisa Sosa, Leonel Tadao Takada, Jacqueline M. Torres, Sven Vanneste, Victor Valcour, Olivia Wen, Olivia Wen, Jennifer S. Yokoyama, Katherine L. Possin, Agustín Ibáñez

Summary

This study examined how social factors like education, food insecurity, financial status, and healthcare access over a lifetime affect brain health and dementia risk across six Latin American countries. While not directly about microplastics, the research is relevant because environmental exposures, including pollutants, are part of the broader exposome that shapes long-term health outcomes. The findings emphasize that cumulative social and environmental disadvantages may increase vulnerability to neurological disease.

Body Systems

A multidimensional social exposome (MSE)-the combined lifespan measures of education, food insecurity, financial status, access to healthcare, childhood experiences, and more-may shape dementia risk and brain health over the lifespan, particularly in underserved regions like Latin America. However, the MSE effects on brain health and dementia are unknown. We evaluated 2211 individuals (controls, Alzheimer's disease, and frontotemporal lobar degeneration) from a non-representative sample across six Latin American countries. Adverse exposomes associate with poorer cognition in healthy aging. In dementia, more complex exposomes correlate with lower cognitive and functional performance, higher neuropsychiatric symptoms, and brain structural and connectivity alterations in frontal-temporal-limbic and cerebellar regions. Food insecurity, financial resources, subjective socioeconomic status, and access to healthcare emerge as critical predictors. Cumulative exposome measures surpass isolated factors in predicting clinical-cognitive profiles. Multiple sensitivity analyses confirm our results. Findings highlight the need for personalized approaches integrating MSE across the lifespan, emphasizing prevention and interventions targeting social disparities.

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