Cargando…

Serial neurocognitive changes following transcatheter aortic valve replacement: comparison between low and intermediate-high risk groups

Background: Data comparing the neurocognitive trajectory between low and intermediate-high risk patients following transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) is never reported. Aims: To report serial neurocognitive changes up to 1 year post-TAVR in low and intermediate-high risk groups as well as...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ko, Tsung-Yu, Kao, Hsien-Li, Yeh, Chih-Fan, Lin, Jiu-Hsiang, Huang, Ching-Chang, Chen, Ying-Hsien, Chao, Chi-Chao, Li, Hung-Yuan, Chan, Chih-Yang, Lin, Lung-Chun, Chen, Yih-Sharng, Wang, Ming-Jiuh, Lin, Mao-Shin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9417238/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35939340
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/aging.204202
_version_ 1784776667573518336
author Ko, Tsung-Yu
Kao, Hsien-Li
Yeh, Chih-Fan
Lin, Jiu-Hsiang
Huang, Ching-Chang
Chen, Ying-Hsien
Chao, Chi-Chao
Li, Hung-Yuan
Chan, Chih-Yang
Lin, Lung-Chun
Chen, Yih-Sharng
Wang, Ming-Jiuh
Lin, Mao-Shin
author_facet Ko, Tsung-Yu
Kao, Hsien-Li
Yeh, Chih-Fan
Lin, Jiu-Hsiang
Huang, Ching-Chang
Chen, Ying-Hsien
Chao, Chi-Chao
Li, Hung-Yuan
Chan, Chih-Yang
Lin, Lung-Chun
Chen, Yih-Sharng
Wang, Ming-Jiuh
Lin, Mao-Shin
author_sort Ko, Tsung-Yu
collection PubMed
description Background: Data comparing the neurocognitive trajectory between low and intermediate-high risk patients following transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) is never reported. Aims: To report serial neurocognitive changes up to 1 year post-TAVR in low and intermediate-high risk groups as well as overall cohort. Methods: Prospective neurological assessments (NIHSS and Barthel Index), global cognitive tests (MMSE and Alzheimer Disease Assessment Scale–Cognitive Subtest, ADAS-cog) and executive performances (Color Trail Test A and B and verbal fluency), were applied at baseline, 3 months and 1 year post-TAVR. Results: In overall cohort, persistent improvement to 1 year in MMSE, ADAS-cog, Color Trail Test A and B was found. According to the STS score, the study cohort was divided into low (<4%, N = 81) and intermediate-high (≧4%, N = 75) risk groups. The baseline neurologic and cognitive performance was significantly worse in intermediate-high risk group. Slight improvement on general neurological functions (Barthel index and proportion of NIHSS>0 patients) at 1 year could be observed only in intermediate-high risk group. In global cognitive assessments, improvement in MMSE and ADAS-cog at 1 year was found in both groups, but the proportion of cognitive improvement was more obvious in intermediate-high risk group. In Color Trail Tests and verbal fluency, significant and persistent improvement up to 1 year could be observed only in low risk group. Conclusions: TAVR was associated with persistent improvement in global cognitive function, as well as in attention and psychomotor processing speed, up to 1 year in overall cohort. However, improvement in tests for executive functions can only be seen in low risk group.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9417238
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Impact Journals
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-94172382022-08-29 Serial neurocognitive changes following transcatheter aortic valve replacement: comparison between low and intermediate-high risk groups Ko, Tsung-Yu Kao, Hsien-Li Yeh, Chih-Fan Lin, Jiu-Hsiang Huang, Ching-Chang Chen, Ying-Hsien Chao, Chi-Chao Li, Hung-Yuan Chan, Chih-Yang Lin, Lung-Chun Chen, Yih-Sharng Wang, Ming-Jiuh Lin, Mao-Shin Aging (Albany NY) Research Paper Background: Data comparing the neurocognitive trajectory between low and intermediate-high risk patients following transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) is never reported. Aims: To report serial neurocognitive changes up to 1 year post-TAVR in low and intermediate-high risk groups as well as overall cohort. Methods: Prospective neurological assessments (NIHSS and Barthel Index), global cognitive tests (MMSE and Alzheimer Disease Assessment Scale–Cognitive Subtest, ADAS-cog) and executive performances (Color Trail Test A and B and verbal fluency), were applied at baseline, 3 months and 1 year post-TAVR. Results: In overall cohort, persistent improvement to 1 year in MMSE, ADAS-cog, Color Trail Test A and B was found. According to the STS score, the study cohort was divided into low (<4%, N = 81) and intermediate-high (≧4%, N = 75) risk groups. The baseline neurologic and cognitive performance was significantly worse in intermediate-high risk group. Slight improvement on general neurological functions (Barthel index and proportion of NIHSS>0 patients) at 1 year could be observed only in intermediate-high risk group. In global cognitive assessments, improvement in MMSE and ADAS-cog at 1 year was found in both groups, but the proportion of cognitive improvement was more obvious in intermediate-high risk group. In Color Trail Tests and verbal fluency, significant and persistent improvement up to 1 year could be observed only in low risk group. Conclusions: TAVR was associated with persistent improvement in global cognitive function, as well as in attention and psychomotor processing speed, up to 1 year in overall cohort. However, improvement in tests for executive functions can only be seen in low risk group. Impact Journals 2022-08-05 /pmc/articles/PMC9417238/ /pubmed/35939340 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/aging.204202 Text en Copyright: © 2022 Ko et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) (CC BY 3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Ko, Tsung-Yu
Kao, Hsien-Li
Yeh, Chih-Fan
Lin, Jiu-Hsiang
Huang, Ching-Chang
Chen, Ying-Hsien
Chao, Chi-Chao
Li, Hung-Yuan
Chan, Chih-Yang
Lin, Lung-Chun
Chen, Yih-Sharng
Wang, Ming-Jiuh
Lin, Mao-Shin
Serial neurocognitive changes following transcatheter aortic valve replacement: comparison between low and intermediate-high risk groups
title Serial neurocognitive changes following transcatheter aortic valve replacement: comparison between low and intermediate-high risk groups
title_full Serial neurocognitive changes following transcatheter aortic valve replacement: comparison between low and intermediate-high risk groups
title_fullStr Serial neurocognitive changes following transcatheter aortic valve replacement: comparison between low and intermediate-high risk groups
title_full_unstemmed Serial neurocognitive changes following transcatheter aortic valve replacement: comparison between low and intermediate-high risk groups
title_short Serial neurocognitive changes following transcatheter aortic valve replacement: comparison between low and intermediate-high risk groups
title_sort serial neurocognitive changes following transcatheter aortic valve replacement: comparison between low and intermediate-high risk groups
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9417238/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35939340
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/aging.204202
work_keys_str_mv AT kotsungyu serialneurocognitivechangesfollowingtranscatheteraorticvalvereplacementcomparisonbetweenlowandintermediatehighriskgroups
AT kaohsienli serialneurocognitivechangesfollowingtranscatheteraorticvalvereplacementcomparisonbetweenlowandintermediatehighriskgroups
AT yehchihfan serialneurocognitivechangesfollowingtranscatheteraorticvalvereplacementcomparisonbetweenlowandintermediatehighriskgroups
AT linjiuhsiang serialneurocognitivechangesfollowingtranscatheteraorticvalvereplacementcomparisonbetweenlowandintermediatehighriskgroups
AT huangchingchang serialneurocognitivechangesfollowingtranscatheteraorticvalvereplacementcomparisonbetweenlowandintermediatehighriskgroups
AT chenyinghsien serialneurocognitivechangesfollowingtranscatheteraorticvalvereplacementcomparisonbetweenlowandintermediatehighriskgroups
AT chaochichao serialneurocognitivechangesfollowingtranscatheteraorticvalvereplacementcomparisonbetweenlowandintermediatehighriskgroups
AT lihungyuan serialneurocognitivechangesfollowingtranscatheteraorticvalvereplacementcomparisonbetweenlowandintermediatehighriskgroups
AT chanchihyang serialneurocognitivechangesfollowingtranscatheteraorticvalvereplacementcomparisonbetweenlowandintermediatehighriskgroups
AT linlungchun serialneurocognitivechangesfollowingtranscatheteraorticvalvereplacementcomparisonbetweenlowandintermediatehighriskgroups
AT chenyihsharng serialneurocognitivechangesfollowingtranscatheteraorticvalvereplacementcomparisonbetweenlowandintermediatehighriskgroups
AT wangmingjiuh serialneurocognitivechangesfollowingtranscatheteraorticvalvereplacementcomparisonbetweenlowandintermediatehighriskgroups
AT linmaoshin serialneurocognitivechangesfollowingtranscatheteraorticvalvereplacementcomparisonbetweenlowandintermediatehighriskgroups