Harvey Philip D, Reichenberg Abraham, Bowie Christopher R
Department of Psychiatry, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York 10029, USA.
Annu Rev Clin Psychol. 2006;2:389-409. doi: 10.1146/annurev.clinpsy.2.022305.095206.
Aging has effects on many features of normal functioning, particularly in the domains of cognition and adaptive life skills. Several psychiatric conditions also affect cognition and adaptive functioning; most of the research on these topics has been performed on patients early in their lives. The amount of research on older patients is smaller than in younger patients, but there is a developing research literature in several aspects of aging and psychopathology. This chapter reviews aging effects on two major psychiatric conditions: schizophrenia and depression. We examine changes in symptoms and cognitive functioning with aging and the functional implications of the development or worsening of cognitive performance. We also identify risk factors for cognitive changes within each condition and examine the implication of early- versus late-life onset. We believe that cognitive changes with aging are potentially predictable, possibly sharing a mechanism with normal aging-related changes and certainly laden with prognostic implications. We see cognitive changes as a possible commonality across persistent psychiatric disorders as well as healthy aging in late life.
衰老会对正常功能的许多特征产生影响,尤其是在认知和适应性生活技能领域。几种精神疾病也会影响认知和适应性功能;关于这些主题的大多数研究都是在患者生命早期进行的。针对老年患者的研究数量少于年轻患者,但在衰老和精神病理学的几个方面,相关研究文献正在不断发展。本章回顾衰老对两种主要精神疾病的影响:精神分裂症和抑郁症。我们研究随着衰老症状和认知功能的变化,以及认知表现发展或恶化的功能影响。我们还确定每种疾病中认知变化的风险因素,并研究早年发病与晚年发病的影响。我们认为,随着衰老出现的认知变化可能是可预测的,可能与正常衰老相关变化共享一种机制,并且肯定具有预后意义。我们将认知变化视为持续性精神疾病以及晚年健康衰老的一个可能的共性。