医学
减肥
斯特罗普效应
日常生活活动
认知
认知测验
认知功能衰退
物理疗法
前瞻性队列研究
老年学
痴呆
肥胖
内科学
疾病
精神科
作者
Michelle H. Zonneveld,Raymond Noordam,Behnam Sabayan,David J. Stott,Simon P. Mooijaart,Gerard J. Blauw,J. Wouter Jukema,Naveed Sattar,Stella Trompet
出处
期刊:Age and Ageing
[Oxford University Press]
日期:2023-01-01
卷期号:52 (1)
被引量:5
标识
DOI:10.1093/ageing/afac312
摘要
Abstract Objective to investigate the association between variability and loss of body weight with subsequent cognitive performance and activities of daily living in older individuals. Design cross-sectional cohort study. Setting PROspective Study of Pravastatin in the Elderly at Risk, multicentre trial with participants from Scotland, Ireland and the Netherlands. Subjects 4,309 participants without severe cognitive dysfunction (mean age 75.1 years, standard deviation (SD) = 3.3), at higher risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD). Methods body weight was measured every 3 months for 2.5 years. Weight loss was defined as an average slope across all weight measurements and as ≥5% decrease in baseline body weight during follow-up. Visit-to-visit variability was defined as the SD of weight measurements (kg) between visits. Four tests of cognitive function were examined: Stroop test, letter-digit coding test (LDCT), immediate and delayed picture-word learning tests. Two measures of daily living activities: Barthel Index (BI) and instrumental activities of daily living (IADL). All tests were examined at month 30. Results both larger body weight variability and loss of ≥5% of baseline weight were independently associated with worse scores on all cognitive tests, but minimally with BI and IADL. Compared with participants with stable weight, participants with significant weight loss performed 5.83 seconds (95% CI 3.74; 7.92) slower on the Stroop test, coded 1.72 digits less (95% CI −2.21; −1.13) on the LDCT and remembered 0.71 pictures less (95% CI -0.93; −0.48) on the delayed picture-word learning test. Conclusion in older people at higher risk for CVD, weight loss and variability are independent risk-factors for worse cognitive function.
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