Ganguli Mary, Du Yangchun, Dodge Hiroko H, Ratcliff Graham G, Chang Chung-Chou H
Division of Geriatrics and Neuropsychiatry, Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, PA, USA.
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2006 Feb;63(2):153-60. doi: 10.1001/archpsyc.63.2.153.
Depression is associated with cognitive impairment and dementia. It is less clear whether depression contributes to further cognitive decline over time, independently of incipient dementia.
To examine the relationship between depressive symptoms and subsequent cognitive decline in a cohort of nondemented older adults, some of whom remained dementia free during follow-up and others in whom incident dementia eventually developed.
Twelve-year prospective epidemiological study, including biennial measurement of cognition and depressive symptoms, biennial assessment of dementia, and comparison of cognitive function at baseline and over time in persons with and without baseline depressive symptoms in the dementia-free and eventual-dementia groups, using random-effects models.
A largely blue-collar rural community.
Population-based sample of 1265 adults 67 years and older without dementia at baseline.
Scores over time on each of several cognitive test composites.
Among 1094 participants who remained dementia free, those with baseline depressive symptoms had significantly lower baseline scores on all cognitive composites than the nondepressed participants. Among the 171 individuals in whom dementia later developed, depression was associated with worse performance in some but not all baseline cognitive composites. Cognitive decline over time was minimal in the dementia-free group, whereas marked decline was seen in the eventual-dementia group. Depressive symptoms were not associated with rate of cognitive decline over time in either group.
Depressive symptoms are cross-sectionally associated with cognitive impairment but not subsequent cognitive decline. Substantial cognitive decline over time cannot be explained by depression and most likely reflects incipient dementia.
抑郁症与认知障碍和痴呆症有关。抑郁症是否会随着时间的推移导致进一步的认知衰退,而与早期痴呆症无关,目前尚不清楚。
研究一组无痴呆症的老年人中抑郁症状与随后认知衰退之间的关系,其中一些人在随访期间未患痴呆症,另一些人最终患上了新发痴呆症。
为期12年的前瞻性流行病学研究,包括每两年对认知和抑郁症状进行测量,每两年对痴呆症进行评估,并使用随机效应模型比较无痴呆症组和最终患痴呆症组中有无基线抑郁症状者在基线时和随时间变化的认知功能。
一个主要为蓝领的农村社区。
基于人群的样本,共1265名67岁及以上的成年人,基线时无痴呆症。
几种认知测试综合指标随时间的得分。
在1094名未患痴呆症的参与者中,有基线抑郁症状的参与者在所有认知综合指标上的基线得分均显著低于无抑郁症状的参与者。在后来患痴呆症的171个人中,抑郁症与部分但并非所有基线认知综合指标的较差表现相关。无痴呆症组随时间的认知衰退最小,而最终患痴呆症组则出现明显衰退。两组中抑郁症状均与随时间的认知衰退率无关。
抑郁症状在横断面与认知障碍相关,但与随后的认知衰退无关。随着时间的推移出现的显著认知衰退不能用抑郁症来解释,很可能反映了早期痴呆症。