Bennett D A, Wilson R S, Schneider J A, Evans D A, Beckett L A, Aggarwal N T, Barnes L L, Fox J H, Bach J
Rush Alzheimer's Disease Center and Rush Institute for Healthy Aging, Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center, Chicago, IL, USA.
Neurology. 2002 Jul 23;59(2):198-205. doi: 10.1212/wnl.59.2.198.
Cognitive abilities of older persons range from normal, to mild cognitive impairment, to dementia. Few large longitudinal studies have compared the natural history of mild cognitive impairment with similar persons without cognitive impairment.
Participants were older Catholic clergy without dementia, 211 with mild cognitive impairment and 587 without cognitive impairment, who underwent annual clinical evaluation for AD and an assessment of different cognitive abilities. Cognitive performance tests were summarized to yield a composite measure of global cognitive function and separate summary measures of episodic memory, semantic memory, working memory, perceptual speed, and visuospatial ability. The authors compared the risk of death, risk of incident AD, and rates of change in global cognition and different cognitive domains among persons with mild cognitive impairment to those without cognitive impairment. All models controlled for age, sex, and education.
On average, persons with mild cognitive impairment had significantly lower scores at baseline in all cognitive domains. Over an average of 4.5 years of follow-up, 30% of persons with mild cognitive impairment died, a rate 1.7 times higher than those without cognitive impairment (95% CI, 1.2 to 2.5). In addition, 64 (34%) persons with mild cognitive impairment developed AD, a rate 3.1 times higher than those without cognitive impairment (95% CI, 2.1 to 4.5). Finally, persons with mild cognitive impairment declined significantly faster on measures of episodic memory, semantic memory, and perceptual speed, but not on measures of working memory or visuospatial ability, as compared with persons without cognitive impairment.
Mild cognitive impairment is associated with an increased risk of death and incident AD, and a greater rate of decline in selected cognitive abilities.
老年人的认知能力范围从正常到轻度认知障碍,再到痴呆。很少有大型纵向研究比较过轻度认知障碍与无认知障碍的相似人群的自然病程。
研究参与者为无痴呆的老年天主教神职人员,其中211人有轻度认知障碍,587人无认知障碍,他们每年接受针对阿尔茨海默病的临床评估以及不同认知能力的评估。对认知表现测试进行汇总,以得出全球认知功能的综合测量值以及情景记忆、语义记忆、工作记忆、感知速度和视觉空间能力的单独汇总测量值。作者比较了轻度认知障碍患者与无认知障碍患者的死亡风险、阿尔茨海默病发病风险以及全球认知和不同认知领域的变化率。所有模型均对年龄、性别和教育程度进行了控制。
平均而言,轻度认知障碍患者在所有认知领域的基线得分均显著较低。在平均4.五年的随访中,30%的轻度认知障碍患者死亡,这一比例比无认知障碍患者高1.7倍(95%置信区间,1.2至2.5)。此外,64名(34%)轻度认知障碍患者患上了阿尔茨海默病,这一比例比无认知障碍患者高3.1倍(95%置信区间,2.1至4.5)。最后,与无认知障碍患者相比,轻度认知障碍患者在情景记忆、语义记忆和感知速度测量方面的下降速度明显更快,但在工作记忆或视觉空间能力测量方面则不然。
轻度认知障碍与死亡风险和阿尔茨海默病发病风险增加以及特定认知能力下降速度加快有关。