Sabia Séverine, Elbaz Alexis, Dugravot Aline, Head Jenny, Shipley Martin, Hagger-Johnson Gareth, Kivimaki Mika, Singh-Manoux Archana
Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College London, London, England, UK.
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2012 Jun;69(6):627-35. doi: 10.1001/archgenpsychiatry.2011.2016.
Smoking is a possible risk factor for dementia, although its impact may have been underestimated in elderly populations because of the shorter life span of smokers.
To examine the association between smoking history and cognitive decline in the transition from midlife to old age.
Cohort study.
The Whitehall II study. The first cognitive assessment was in 1997 to 1999, repeated over 2002 to 2004 and 2007 to 2009.
Data are from 5099 men and 2137 women in the Whitehall II study, mean age 56 years (range, 44-69 years) at the first cognitive assessment.
The cognitive test battery was composed of tests of memory, vocabulary, executive function (composed of 1 reasoning and 2 fluency tests), and a global cognitive score summarizing performance across all 5 tests. Smoking status was assessed over the entire study period. Linear mixed models were used to assess the association between smoking history and 10-year cognitive decline, expressed as z scores.
In men, 10-year cognitive decline in all tests except vocabulary among never smokers ranged from a quarter to a third of the baseline standard deviation. Faster cognitive decline was observed among current smokers compared with never smokers in men (mean difference in 10-year decline in global cognition=-0.09 [95% CI, -0.15 to -0.03] and executive function=-0.11 [95% CI, -0.17 to -0.05]). Recent ex-smokers had greater decline in executive function (-0.08 [95% CI, -0.14 to -0.02]), while the decline in long-term ex-smokers was similar to that among never smokers. In analyses that additionally took dropout and death into account, these differences were 1.2 to 1.5 times larger. In women, cognitive decline did not vary as a function of smoking status.
Compared with never smokers, middle-aged male smokers experienced faster cognitive decline in global cognition and executive function. In ex-smokers with at least a 10-year cessation, there were no adverse effects on cognitive decline.
吸烟是痴呆症的一个潜在风险因素,尽管由于吸烟者寿命较短,其在老年人群中的影响可能被低估了。
研究从中年到老年过渡阶段吸烟史与认知能力下降之间的关联。
队列研究。
白厅II研究。首次认知评估在1997年至1999年进行,于2002年至2004年以及2007年至2009年重复进行。
数据来自白厅II研究中的5099名男性和2137名女性,首次认知评估时的平均年龄为56岁(范围44 - 69岁)。
认知测试组合包括记忆、词汇、执行功能(由1项推理和2项流畅性测试组成)测试,以及一个汇总所有5项测试表现的整体认知分数。在整个研究期间评估吸烟状况。使用线性混合模型评估吸烟史与10年认知能力下降之间的关联,以z分数表示。
在男性中,从不吸烟者在除词汇测试外的所有测试中的10年认知能力下降幅度为基线标准差的四分之一到三分之一。与从不吸烟者相比,当前吸烟者的认知能力下降更快(整体认知10年下降的平均差异=-0.09 [95%可信区间,-0.15至-0.03],执行功能=-0.11 [95%可信区间,-0.17至-0.05])。近期戒烟者的执行功能下降幅度更大(-0.08 [95%可信区间,-0.14至-0.02]),而长期戒烟者的下降幅度与从不吸烟者相似。在额外考虑失访和死亡情况的分析中,这些差异增大了1.2至1.5倍。在女性中,认知能力下降并未随吸烟状况而变化。
与从不吸烟者相比,中年男性吸烟者在整体认知和执行功能方面的认知能力下降更快。在戒烟至少10年的前吸烟者中,对认知能力下降没有不良影响。