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Risk Factors for Late-Life Cognitive Decline and Variation with Age and Sex in the Sydney Memory and Ageing Study

INTRODUCTION: An aging population brings increasing burdens and costs to individuals and society arising from late-life cognitive decline, the causes of which are unclear. We aimed to identify factors predicting late-life cognitive decline. METHODS: Participants were 889 community-dwelling 70–90-yea...

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Autores principales: Lipnicki, Darren M., Sachdev, Perminder S., Crawford, John, Reppermund, Simone, Kochan, Nicole A., Trollor, Julian N., Draper, Brian, Slavin, Melissa J., Kang, Kristan, Lux, Ora, Mather, Karen A., Brodaty, Henry
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3683032/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23799051
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0065841
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author Lipnicki, Darren M.
Sachdev, Perminder S.
Crawford, John
Reppermund, Simone
Kochan, Nicole A.
Trollor, Julian N.
Draper, Brian
Slavin, Melissa J.
Kang, Kristan
Lux, Ora
Mather, Karen A.
Brodaty, Henry
author_facet Lipnicki, Darren M.
Sachdev, Perminder S.
Crawford, John
Reppermund, Simone
Kochan, Nicole A.
Trollor, Julian N.
Draper, Brian
Slavin, Melissa J.
Kang, Kristan
Lux, Ora
Mather, Karen A.
Brodaty, Henry
author_sort Lipnicki, Darren M.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: An aging population brings increasing burdens and costs to individuals and society arising from late-life cognitive decline, the causes of which are unclear. We aimed to identify factors predicting late-life cognitive decline. METHODS: Participants were 889 community-dwelling 70–90-year-olds from the Sydney Memory and Ageing Study with comprehensive neuropsychological assessments at baseline and a 2-year follow-up and initially without dementia. Cognitive decline was considered as incident mild cognitive impairment (MCI) or dementia, as well as decreases in attention/processing speed, executive function, memory, and global cognition. Associations with baseline demographic, lifestyle, health and medical factors were determined. RESULTS: All cognitive measures showed decline and 14% of participants developed incident MCI or dementia. Across all participants, risk factors for decline included older age and poorer smelling ability most prominently, but also more education, history of depression, being male, higher homocysteine, coronary artery disease, arthritis, low health status, and stroke. Protective factors included marriage, kidney disease, and antidepressant use. For some of these factors the association varied with age or differed between men and women. Additional risk and protective factors that were strictly age- and/or sex-dependent were also identified. We found salient population attributable risks (8.7–49.5%) for older age, being male or unmarried, poor smelling ability, coronary artery disease, arthritis, stroke, and high homocysteine. DISCUSSION: Preventing or treating conditions typically associated with aging might reduce population-wide late-life cognitive decline. Interventions tailored to particular age and sex groups may offer further benefits.
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spelling pubmed-36830322013-06-24 Risk Factors for Late-Life Cognitive Decline and Variation with Age and Sex in the Sydney Memory and Ageing Study Lipnicki, Darren M. Sachdev, Perminder S. Crawford, John Reppermund, Simone Kochan, Nicole A. Trollor, Julian N. Draper, Brian Slavin, Melissa J. Kang, Kristan Lux, Ora Mather, Karen A. Brodaty, Henry PLoS One Research Article INTRODUCTION: An aging population brings increasing burdens and costs to individuals and society arising from late-life cognitive decline, the causes of which are unclear. We aimed to identify factors predicting late-life cognitive decline. METHODS: Participants were 889 community-dwelling 70–90-year-olds from the Sydney Memory and Ageing Study with comprehensive neuropsychological assessments at baseline and a 2-year follow-up and initially without dementia. Cognitive decline was considered as incident mild cognitive impairment (MCI) or dementia, as well as decreases in attention/processing speed, executive function, memory, and global cognition. Associations with baseline demographic, lifestyle, health and medical factors were determined. RESULTS: All cognitive measures showed decline and 14% of participants developed incident MCI or dementia. Across all participants, risk factors for decline included older age and poorer smelling ability most prominently, but also more education, history of depression, being male, higher homocysteine, coronary artery disease, arthritis, low health status, and stroke. Protective factors included marriage, kidney disease, and antidepressant use. For some of these factors the association varied with age or differed between men and women. Additional risk and protective factors that were strictly age- and/or sex-dependent were also identified. We found salient population attributable risks (8.7–49.5%) for older age, being male or unmarried, poor smelling ability, coronary artery disease, arthritis, stroke, and high homocysteine. DISCUSSION: Preventing or treating conditions typically associated with aging might reduce population-wide late-life cognitive decline. Interventions tailored to particular age and sex groups may offer further benefits. Public Library of Science 2013-06-14 /pmc/articles/PMC3683032/ /pubmed/23799051 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0065841 Text en © 2013 Lipnicki et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lipnicki, Darren M.
Sachdev, Perminder S.
Crawford, John
Reppermund, Simone
Kochan, Nicole A.
Trollor, Julian N.
Draper, Brian
Slavin, Melissa J.
Kang, Kristan
Lux, Ora
Mather, Karen A.
Brodaty, Henry
Risk Factors for Late-Life Cognitive Decline and Variation with Age and Sex in the Sydney Memory and Ageing Study
title Risk Factors for Late-Life Cognitive Decline and Variation with Age and Sex in the Sydney Memory and Ageing Study
title_full Risk Factors for Late-Life Cognitive Decline and Variation with Age and Sex in the Sydney Memory and Ageing Study
title_fullStr Risk Factors for Late-Life Cognitive Decline and Variation with Age and Sex in the Sydney Memory and Ageing Study
title_full_unstemmed Risk Factors for Late-Life Cognitive Decline and Variation with Age and Sex in the Sydney Memory and Ageing Study
title_short Risk Factors for Late-Life Cognitive Decline and Variation with Age and Sex in the Sydney Memory and Ageing Study
title_sort risk factors for late-life cognitive decline and variation with age and sex in the sydney memory and ageing study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3683032/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23799051
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0065841
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