The findings showed that people in the upper 20% of adiposity in the subscapular region were almost four times more likely to develop AD than were those in the lowest 20%. That risk for individuals in the upper 20% of adiposity on triceps measurements was about 3.5 times greater than that of people in the lowest quintile. Previous research and others have shown that overweight and obesity in middle age increase the future risk of dementia and AD. However, these studies relied on measurement of BMI. The data from the current study, in which calipers were used to measure skinfold, were adjusted for BMI, as well as for common co-morbidities of obesity.
Many of these people in the upper quintile were overweight or obese  but not all of them. Even a person of normal weight in middle age may be more likely to develop AD if he is carrying a centralized truncal distribution of fat.