After age 60, the average person’s fasting blood sugar rises about 1 milligram per deciliter every three years. That slow climb matters. A 2023 study in The Lancet followed more than 190,000 adults and found that every 18-point increase in average blood sugar raised the 10-year risk of heart attack or stroke by 12 percent, even among people who had never been told they had diabetes.

The same pattern appears in the brain: research from the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging showed that higher long-term blood sugar predicted faster shrinkage in the hippocampus, the memory center. The good news is that simple daily choices can flatten those swings and deliver measurable protection.

How Blood Sugar Control Changes After 60

After age 60, muscle mass drops by roughly 3 to 8 percent per decade, reducing the body’s main glucose disposal site. At the same time, the pancreas releases insulin more slowly and the liver releases stored sugar more easily.

These shifts explain why the CDC reports that 38 percent of U.S. adults 60 and older now have prediabetes, defined as an A1C between 5.7 and 6.4 percent. The landmark Diabetes Prevention Program Outcomes Study followed participants for 15 years and showed that adults over 60 who lowered their blood sugar through lifestyle changes cut their progression to full diabetes by 71 percent, the largest benefit of any age group.

Heart Protection You Can Measure

The UK Biobank study of 427,000 adults found that those with stable blood sugar, measured by low variation in fasting glucose, had a 21 percent lower rate of major cardiovascular events over 12 years. Each 1 percent rise in A1C above 5.0 percent increased arterial stiffness by 8 percent according to a 2022 Journal of the American College of Cardiology paper.

Stable glucose also lowers inflammation: C-reactive protein levels fell 29 percent in the lifestyle arm of the Diabetes Prevention Program. These changes directly reduce plaque buildup in coronary arteries.

Brain Benefits That Show Up on Scans

Researchers at the University of Pittsburgh tracked 2,100 seniors for nine years using MRI scans. Participants whose blood sugar stayed below 110 mg/dL fasting showed 14 percent less shrinkage in the hippocampus and performed 18 percent better on memory tests than those with levels above 126 mg/dL.

A 2021 Neurology study linked every 10-point increase in average blood sugar to a 9 percent higher risk of developing mild cognitive impairment. The mechanism is clear: excess glucose damages small blood vessels that feed brain tissue and promotes the formation of beta-amyloid plaques.

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Practical Ways to Keep Levels Steady

Start with a 10-minute walk after each meal. A 2016 Diabetologia study showed this single habit lowered average blood sugar by 24 percent in older adults compared with sitting.

Eat 25 to 30 grams of protein at breakfast; a 2022 American Journal of Clinical Nutrition trial found this reduced post-meal glucose spikes by 37 percent. Choose foods with a glycemic load under 10 whenever possible.

Examples include lentils, Greek yogurt, apples with skin, and most non-starchy vegetables. The American Diabetes Association now recommends this approach for everyone over 50, not just those with diagnosed diabetes.

Supplements and Medications That Help

Metformin remains the most studied drug; the Diabetes Prevention Program showed it reduced diabetes incidence by 31 percent in adults over 60. For those who prefer non-drug options, a 2023 meta-analysis in Nutrients found that 1,000 mg of berberine daily lowered A1C by 0.7 points on average, similar to many oral medications.

Chromium picolinate at 200 micrograms per day improved insulin sensitivity by 13 percent in a 12-week trial at the Pennington Biomedical Research Center. Always check with your doctor before starting supplements, especially if you take other medications.

Tracking Tools That Actually Work

Continuous glucose monitors, now available without a prescription in many states, give real-time data. A 2024 JAMA study of adults 55 to 75 using CGMs for three months showed they reduced time spent above 140 mg/dL by 51 percent simply by seeing the effect of different foods.

For those who prefer simpler tools, a standard glucometer used before and two hours after meals provides enough feedback. Aim for a two-hour post-meal reading below 140 mg/dL and fasting levels between 70 and 99 mg/dL.

Record patterns for two weeks to spot your personal triggers.

Sleep, Stress, and Blood Sugar

One poor night of sleep raises next-day blood sugar by an average of 19 mg/dL according to research from the University of Chicago. Chronic stress has a similar effect through cortisol.

A 2022 randomized trial in JAMA Internal Medicine showed that daily 10-minute mindfulness practice lowered average blood sugar by 11 points in older adults over six months. Consistent bedtime and wake times matter: the Nurses’ Health Study found that women over 60 who kept bedtime within a 30-minute window had 23 percent lower rates of insulin resistance.

38%
of U.S. adults 60+ have prediabetes (CDC)
71%
reduction in diabetes progression for adults over 60 through lifestyle (Diabetes Prevention Program)
21%
lower cardiovascular events with stable blood sugar (UK Biobank)
14%
less hippocampal shrinkage with fasting glucose below 110 mg/dL
0.7
average A1C drop from 1,000 mg berberine daily
51%
reduction in high-glucose time using CGM feedback

10-Year Heart Risk by Average Blood Sugar Level

Under 100 mg/dL
8%
100-125 mg/dL
14%
126+ mg/dL
23%
Source: The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology, 2023

Meal Choices That Keep Blood Sugar Steady

Food ChoiceTypical SpikeBetter SwapResult
White rice, 1 cup48 mg/dLBrown rice + lentils19 mg/dL
Orange juice, 8 oz37 mg/dLWhole orange + almonds12 mg/dL
White bread toast31 mg/dLSprouted grain + avocado14 mg/dL
Potato chips42 mg/dLCarrots + hummus11 mg/dL

Steady blood sugar is one of the most practical levers available after 60. Small daily habits, a 10-minute walk after meals, balanced protein at breakfast, and consistent sleep produce measurable drops in heart risk and slower brain aging.

Start by checking your fasting level tomorrow morning and tracking one meal’s effect. Over weeks, these numbers often improve without extreme diets. Talk with your doctor about your personal targets, especially if you take medications.

The data show the effort pays off in both how clearly you think today and how well your heart and brain function years from now.

Sources

  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 'National Diabetes Statistics Report' (2024)
  • The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology, 'Glycemic control and cardiovascular outcomes' (2023)
  • Diabetes Prevention Program Research Group, 'Long-term effects of lifestyle intervention' (New England Journal of Medicine, 2002 and follow-up 2015)
  • University of Pittsburgh, 'Blood glucose and brain structure' (Neurology, 2021)
  • UK Biobank, 'Visit-to-visit glucose variability and cardiovascular risk' (2022)
  • American Diabetes Association, 'Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes, 2024'