Fellows Robert P, Byrd Desiree A, Morgello Susan
a Department of Neurology , The Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai , New York , NY , USA.
J Clin Exp Neuropsychol. 2014;36(8):806-17. doi: 10.1080/13803395.2014.943696. Epub 2014 Aug 11.
It is unclear whether or to what degree literacy, aging, and other neurologic abnormalities relate to cognitive deficits among people living with HIV/AIDS in the combined antiretroviral therapy (CART) era. The primary aim of this study was to simultaneously examine the association of age, HIV-associated motor abnormalities, major depressive disorder, and reading level with information processing speed, learning, memory, and executive functions, and to determine whether processing speed mediated any of the relationships between cognitive and noncognitive variables.
Participants were 186 racially and ethnically diverse men and women living with HIV/AIDS who underwent comprehensive neurological, neuropsychological, and medical evaluations. Structural equation modeling was utilized to assess the extent to which information processing speed mediated the relationship between age, motor abnormalities, major depressive disorder, and reading level with other cognitive abilities.
Age, motor dysfunction, reading level, and current major depressive disorder were all significantly associated with information processing speed. Information processing speed fully mediated the effects of age on learning, memory, and executive functioning and partially mediated the effect of major depressive disorder on learning and memory. The effect of motor dysfunction on learning and memory was fully mediated by processing speed.
These findings provide support for information processing speed as a primary deficit, which may account, at least in part, for many of the other cognitive abnormalities recognized in complex HIV/AIDS populations. The association of age and information processing speed may account for HIV/aging synergies in the generation of CART-era cognitive abnormalities.
在联合抗逆转录病毒疗法(CART)时代,识字能力、衰老及其他神经功能异常与艾滋病毒/艾滋病感染者认知缺陷之间是否存在关联以及关联程度如何尚不清楚。本研究的主要目的是同时考察年龄、与艾滋病毒相关的运动异常、重度抑郁症和阅读水平与信息处理速度、学习、记忆及执行功能之间的关联,并确定处理速度是否介导了认知和非认知变量之间的任何关系。
研究对象为186名感染艾滋病毒/艾滋病的不同种族和族裔的男性和女性,他们接受了全面的神经学、神经心理学和医学评估。采用结构方程模型来评估信息处理速度在多大程度上介导了年龄、运动异常、重度抑郁症和阅读水平与其他认知能力之间的关系。
年龄、运动功能障碍、阅读水平和当前的重度抑郁症均与信息处理速度显著相关。信息处理速度完全介导了年龄对学习、记忆和执行功能的影响,部分介导了重度抑郁症对学习和记忆的影响。运动功能障碍对学习和记忆的影响完全由处理速度介导。
这些发现支持将信息处理速度作为主要缺陷,这可能至少部分解释了在复杂的艾滋病毒/艾滋病群体中所识别出的许多其他认知异常。年龄与信息处理速度之间的关联可能解释了CART时代认知异常产生过程中的艾滋病毒/衰老协同作用。