People exposed to daytime bright light were significantly less likely to develop dementia over eight years, with the strongest association seen in those already at high risk, highlighting light exposure as a promising avenue for future prevention research.
Large prospective study published in journal General psychiatry It was found that the greater the exposure to bright light during the day, the lower the risk of developing dementia.
Circadian rhythms may influence the onset of dementia
Dementia is the most common neurodegenerative disease worldwide, and its prevalence is increasing rapidly as the world’s population ages. and Effective treatments are limited, so prevention is the top priority.
The environmental light-dark cycle is key to aligning with natural circadian rhythms, which in turn is the basis for normal physiological, behavioral, and cognitive function. People with dementia often exhibit disrupted circadian rhythms, and these, in turn, are associated with an increased risk of dementia.
Further evidence of such a link comes from the promising use of bright light therapy (BLT) in patients with dementia to correct dysregulated circadian rhythms and improve cognitive symptoms. However, modern lifestyles limit adequate exposure to natural bright light during the day as most people spend their time indoors in poorly lit buildings. This is further exacerbated by excessive light exposure at night, which affects almost 80% of the world’s population.
The current study aimed to investigate the association between daytime and nighttime light exposure and dementia risk.
Wearable device tracked weekly light exposure patterns
Researchers used a wrist-worn device to measure daytime and nighttime light exposure over seven days in a community cohort of 87,577 adults without dementia (mean age 62 years). They then investigated whether light exposure predicted future dementia diagnosis.
Bright daylight leads to lower risk of dementia
Over a median follow-up of 8 years, 741 participants developed dementia. At baseline, participants who developed dementia were more likely to be older, male, less educated, less physically active, smokers, or have high blood pressure, diabetes, or hearing loss.
Researchers found that exposure to daytime light levels brighter than 1,000 lux reduced the risk of dementia by 16%. Similar associations were shown for shorter durations of brighter daytime light, suggesting a graded pattern across brighter light thresholds.
Therefore, a 17% reduction in risk was observed for at least 1.4 hours of exposure to bright daytime light of 3000 lux or higher, compared to 0.7 hours at 5000 lux and 0.45 hours at 7000 lux.
Greater impact among high-risk groups
Average daytime light exposure was high, and the effects of prolonged exposure to bright daytime light were most pronounced in certain groups. For example, such exposure was associated with a 30% to 38% reduction in dementia risk in individuals exposed to higher levels of light at night.
Among carriers of the APOE ε4 gene mutation, a major risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease, reductions were seen by 31% to 41% and 19% to 27% in patients with evening chronotype. However, no significant association was found between nighttime light exposure and dementia risk.
These four measures of daytime light exposure were compared to 15 established risk markers for dementia to assess their predictive ability. of The highest ranked daytime light measurement was exposure of 5000 lux or more for less than 0.7 hours, ranking 10th out of 19 predictors overall.
This daytime light measurement outperformed six traditional factors: alcohol consumption, obesity, particulate matter air pollution, vitamin D supplement use, traumatic brain injury, and hearing loss. The last three also performed worse than exposures of less than 1.4 hours at 3000 lux and less than 0.45 hours at 7000 lux.
potential mechanism
The researchers investigated possible mediators of these associations. The findings suggest that the fusiform cortex accounted for about 9% of the association between average daytime light levels above 1000 lux and dementia risk.
Exploratory analyzes suggested that up to 33% of the association could be explained by changes in circadian resting activity rhythms and changes in brain structure, but many of these mediation findings were exploratory and did not remain statistically significant after correction for multiple testing.
The findings also suggest that circadian rest-activity rhythms and structural changes in the brain may be partially responsible for the association between increased daytime light exposure and reduced dementia risk. Exploratory analyzes also suggested that increased daytime light exposure was associated with protective structural changes in the occipital, frontal, and temporal cortices, consistent with earlier studies and suggesting alternative protective mechanisms, although these findings should be tested in future studies.
what it means
This study identified that higher daytime light exposure was significantly correlated with lower dementia risk and had better predictive performance compared to several traditional risk markers. This finding is consistent with previous research suggesting that exposure to bright light during the day improves circadian rhythms and mental health, including major depression.
Exposure to free-living light can also be easily measured objectively and may therefore be a promising method for identifying individuals at increased risk of dementia. Second, increasing daytime light exposure may be a simple and inexpensive strategy to reduce dementia risk in both clinical and community settings.
They suggest targeting the high-risk groups covered by these programs by implementing simple measures such as optimizing lighting conditions in homes and workplaces and encouraging participation in local outdoor activities.
Why not use a night light?
The lack of correlation with nighttime light exposure may be due to the use of wrist monitors. Wrist monitors miss the actual retinal light exposure and may not capture the blue light emission that is characteristic of most light emitting diodes and is the most powerful disruptor of circadian rhythms. Furthermore, this study period predated the frequent exposure to intense light at night associated with the now widespread use of personal electronic devices at night.
Restrictions
This study is observational and cannot prove that more light exposure causes a lower risk of dementia. This cohort is part of the UK Biobank study and is healthier and less deprived than the general population, which limits its generalizability. The precise light exposure thresholds used here may not be directly applicable to the entire population.
Weekly light exposure may not correspond to long-term behavior. Optical tracking devices were unable to capture retinal light perception, which is important for dementia risk associations.
Brighter days were associated with healthier brain aging
Greater daytime light exposure was associated with a significantly lower risk of dementia in older adults, whereas nighttime light exposure did not show a significant association. Further research is needed to determine whether increasing daytime light exposure can directly reduce the risk of dementia and whether light-based interventions can be part of dementia prevention strategies.
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Reference magazines:
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Zheng, N., Wang, W., Li, B. et al. (2026). Association between daytime and nighttime light exposure measured by wearable devices and dementia risk: A prospective cohort study. General psychiatry. Toi: https://doi.org/10.1002/gps3.70039. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/gps3.70039

