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Jun
Study Associates Exposure to Pesticide Mixtures with an Increase in Alzheimer’s Disease Prevalence
(Beyond Pesticides, June 30, 2026) A peer-reviewed article, published in Scientific Reports, focuses on the link between exposure to pesticide mixtures and Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) prevalence at the county-level across the United States. Alzheimer’s, a type of dementia that affects memory, thinking, and behavior, accounts for 60-80% of dementia cases. In conducting a novel cross-sectional analysis of data on pesticide application intensity and disease prevalence, the researchers, from the Medical University of South Carolina, are able to identify exposure clusters with significant associations to the occurrence of AD. The strongest positive associations, where AD prevalence increases as pesticide exposure increases, are “observed for a soil fumigation/nematicide system, an herbicide-dominant vegetation control regime, and a neuroactive insecticide system,” the authors note. These findings link pesticide mixtures to increased AD rates. (See the full PDF of the study here.) Study Importance and Background AD is a condition that gradually damages and destroys neurons in the brain, with disproportionate risks across the U.S. in certain geographical areas. (See here and here.) “These spatial patterns suggest that contextual and environmental determinants may contribute to disparities in dementia burden beyond established individual-level risk factors,” the researchers state. They continue, “Although AD dementia is the leading […]










