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The Influence of Multimorbidity on Clinical Progression of Dementia in a Population-Based Cohort

INTRODUCTION: Co-occurrence with other chronic diseases may influence the progression of dementia, especially in case of multiple chronic diseases. We aimed to verify whether multimorbidity influenced cognitive and daily functioning during nine years after dementia diagnosis compared with the influe...

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Autores principales: Melis, René J. F., Marengoni, Alessandra, Rizzuto, Debora, Teerenstra, Steven, Kivipelto, Miia, Angleman, Sara B., Fratiglioni, Laura
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3875493/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24386324
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0084014
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author Melis, René J. F.
Marengoni, Alessandra
Rizzuto, Debora
Teerenstra, Steven
Kivipelto, Miia
Angleman, Sara B.
Fratiglioni, Laura
author_facet Melis, René J. F.
Marengoni, Alessandra
Rizzuto, Debora
Teerenstra, Steven
Kivipelto, Miia
Angleman, Sara B.
Fratiglioni, Laura
author_sort Melis, René J. F.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Co-occurrence with other chronic diseases may influence the progression of dementia, especially in case of multiple chronic diseases. We aimed to verify whether multimorbidity influenced cognitive and daily functioning during nine years after dementia diagnosis compared with the influence in persons without dementia. METHODS: In the Kungsholmen Project, a population-based cohort study, we followed 310 persons with incident dementia longitudinally. We compared their trajectories with those of 679 persons without dementia. Progression was studied for cognition and activities of daily life (ADLs), measured by MMSE and Katz Index respectively. The effect of multimorbidity and its interaction with dementia status was studied using individual growth models. RESULTS: The mean (SD) follow-up time was 4.7 (2.3) years. As expected, dementia related to both the decline in cognitive and daily functioning. Irrespective of dementia status, persons with more diseases had significantly worse baseline daily functioning. In dementia patients having more diseases also related to a significantly faster decline in daily functioning. Due to the combination of lower functioning in ADLs at baseline and faster decline, dementia patients with multimorbidity were about one to two years ahead of the decline of dementia patients without any co-morbidity. In persons without dementia, no significant decline in ADLs over time was present, nor was multimorbidity related to the decline rate. Cognitive decline measured with MMSE remained unrelated to the number of diseases present at baseline. CONCLUSION: Multimorbidity was related to baseline daily function in both persons with and without dementia, and with accelerated decline in people with dementia but not in non-demented individuals. No relationship of multimorbidity with cognitive functioning was established. These findings imply a strong interconnection between physical and mental health, where the greatest disablement occurs when both somatic and mental disorders are present.
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spelling pubmed-38754932014-01-02 The Influence of Multimorbidity on Clinical Progression of Dementia in a Population-Based Cohort Melis, René J. F. Marengoni, Alessandra Rizzuto, Debora Teerenstra, Steven Kivipelto, Miia Angleman, Sara B. Fratiglioni, Laura PLoS One Research Article INTRODUCTION: Co-occurrence with other chronic diseases may influence the progression of dementia, especially in case of multiple chronic diseases. We aimed to verify whether multimorbidity influenced cognitive and daily functioning during nine years after dementia diagnosis compared with the influence in persons without dementia. METHODS: In the Kungsholmen Project, a population-based cohort study, we followed 310 persons with incident dementia longitudinally. We compared their trajectories with those of 679 persons without dementia. Progression was studied for cognition and activities of daily life (ADLs), measured by MMSE and Katz Index respectively. The effect of multimorbidity and its interaction with dementia status was studied using individual growth models. RESULTS: The mean (SD) follow-up time was 4.7 (2.3) years. As expected, dementia related to both the decline in cognitive and daily functioning. Irrespective of dementia status, persons with more diseases had significantly worse baseline daily functioning. In dementia patients having more diseases also related to a significantly faster decline in daily functioning. Due to the combination of lower functioning in ADLs at baseline and faster decline, dementia patients with multimorbidity were about one to two years ahead of the decline of dementia patients without any co-morbidity. In persons without dementia, no significant decline in ADLs over time was present, nor was multimorbidity related to the decline rate. Cognitive decline measured with MMSE remained unrelated to the number of diseases present at baseline. CONCLUSION: Multimorbidity was related to baseline daily function in both persons with and without dementia, and with accelerated decline in people with dementia but not in non-demented individuals. No relationship of multimorbidity with cognitive functioning was established. These findings imply a strong interconnection between physical and mental health, where the greatest disablement occurs when both somatic and mental disorders are present. Public Library of Science 2013-12-30 /pmc/articles/PMC3875493/ /pubmed/24386324 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0084014 Text en © 2013 Melis 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
Melis, René J. F.
Marengoni, Alessandra
Rizzuto, Debora
Teerenstra, Steven
Kivipelto, Miia
Angleman, Sara B.
Fratiglioni, Laura
The Influence of Multimorbidity on Clinical Progression of Dementia in a Population-Based Cohort
title The Influence of Multimorbidity on Clinical Progression of Dementia in a Population-Based Cohort
title_full The Influence of Multimorbidity on Clinical Progression of Dementia in a Population-Based Cohort
title_fullStr The Influence of Multimorbidity on Clinical Progression of Dementia in a Population-Based Cohort
title_full_unstemmed The Influence of Multimorbidity on Clinical Progression of Dementia in a Population-Based Cohort
title_short The Influence of Multimorbidity on Clinical Progression of Dementia in a Population-Based Cohort
title_sort influence of multimorbidity on clinical progression of dementia in a population-based cohort
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3875493/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24386324
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0084014
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