Cognitive Dysfunction in Urban-Community Dwelling Prefrail Older Subjects - 06/12/24

Doi : 10.1007/s12603-018-1017-5 
Hiroyuki Umegaki 1 , T. Makino 2, H. Shimada 3, T. Hayashi 2, X. Wu Cheng 2, M. Kuzuya 1, 2
1 Department of Community Healthcare & Geriatrics, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine, 65 Tsuruma-cho, Showa-ku, 466-8550, Nagoya, Aichi, Japan 
2 Institute of Innovation for Future Society, Nagoya University, Aichi, Japan 
3 Department of Preventive Gerontology, Center for Gerontology and Social Science, National Center for Geriatrics and Gerontology, Obu, Japan 

Bienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
Article gratuit.

Connectez-vous pour en bénéficier!

Abstract

Objectives

A number of studies have reported that frailty is cross-sectionally associated with cognitive decline and is also a risk for future cognitive decline or dementia; however, there have been only a few studies that focus on the association between prefrailty and cognitive dysfunction. In the current study, we investigated the association between prefrailty and cognition

Design

A cross-sectional study of the data obtained at registration in a randomized control trial.

Setting

Toyota, Japan.

Participants

Community-dwelling older subjects (male 54.6%) who had cognitive complaints.

Measurements

A battery of neuropsychological and physical assessments were performed. Prefrailty was defined as exhibiting one or two of the five Fried criteria (weight loss, exhaustion, weakness, slow gait speed and low physical activity). We performed a multiple regression analysis to investigate the associations of cognitive performance with prefrailty, adjusting for the factors that were significantly different between the robust and prefrailty groups. To assess the cognitive attributes that were significantly associated with prefrailty, logistic analysis was performed to see if one specific criterion of the five frailty criteria was associated with cognitive performance.

Results

The study subjects included 183 prefrail and 264 robust individuals. The prefrail subjects with cognitive complaints were older, less educated, more depressive, and more likely to have diabetes mellitus than the robust subjects. The prefrail subjects had lower performance in a wide-range of cognitive domains, and after adjustments for age, education, depressive mood, and diabetes mellitus, prefrailty was associated with a decline in delayed memory and processing speed. Among the components of the Fried criteria, slow gait speed and loss of activity were significantly associated with slow processing speed as assessed by the digit symbol substitution test.

Conclusion

The current results demonstrated that prefrailty was associated with worse memory and processing speed performance, but not with other cognitive domains.

Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.

Key words : Neuropsychological assessments, memory, processing speed, digit symbol substitution, diabetes mellitus, depression


Plan


© 2023  © 2023 SERDI Publisher.. Publié par Elsevier Masson SAS. Tous droits réservés.
Ajouter à ma bibliothèque Retirer de ma bibliothèque Imprimer
Export

    Export citations

  • Fichier

  • Contenu

Vol 22 - N° 4

P. 549-554 - avril 2018 Retour au numéro
Article précédent Article précédent
  • “Feeling More Self-Confident, Cheerful and Safe. Experiences from a Health-Promoting Intervention in Community Dwelling Older Adults — A Qualitative Study
  • Ã…sa von Berens, A. Koochek, M. Nydahl, R.A. Fielding, T. Gustafsson, D.R. Kirn, T. Cederholm, M. Södergren
| Article suivant Article suivant
  • Dietary Restriction Ameliorates Age-Related Increase in DNA Damage, Senescence and Inflammation in Mouse Adipose Tissuey
  • A. Ishaq, J. Schröder, N. Edwards, T. von Zglinicki, Gabriele Saretzki

Bienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.

Mon compte


Plateformes Elsevier Masson

Déclaration CNIL

EM-CONSULTE.COM est déclaré à la CNIL, déclaration n° 1286925.

En application de la loi nº78-17 du 6 janvier 1978 relative à l'informatique, aux fichiers et aux libertés, vous disposez des droits d'opposition (art.26 de la loi), d'accès (art.34 à 38 de la loi), et de rectification (art.36 de la loi) des données vous concernant. Ainsi, vous pouvez exiger que soient rectifiées, complétées, clarifiées, mises à jour ou effacées les informations vous concernant qui sont inexactes, incomplètes, équivoques, périmées ou dont la collecte ou l'utilisation ou la conservation est interdite.
Les informations personnelles concernant les visiteurs de notre site, y compris leur identité, sont confidentielles.
Le responsable du site s'engage sur l'honneur à respecter les conditions légales de confidentialité applicables en France et à ne pas divulguer ces informations à des tiers.


Tout le contenu de ce site: Copyright © 2025 Elsevier, ses concédants de licence et ses contributeurs. Tout les droits sont réservés, y compris ceux relatifs à l'exploration de textes et de données, a la formation en IA et aux technologies similaires. Pour tout contenu en libre accès, les conditions de licence Creative Commons s'appliquent.