Clare Linda, Wu Yu-Tzu, Teale Julia C, MacLeod Catherine, Matthews Fiona, Brayne Carol, Woods Bob
Centre for Research in Ageing and Cognitive Health (REACH), School of Psychology, University of Exeter, Exeter, United Kingdom.
PenCLAHRC, Institute of Health Research, University of Exeter Medical School, Exeter, United Kingdom.
PLoS Med. 2017 Mar 21;14(3):e1002259. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002259. eCollection 2017 Mar.
Potentially modifiable lifestyle factors may influence cognitive health in later life and offer potential to reduce the risk of cognitive decline and dementia. The concept of cognitive reserve has been proposed as a mechanism to explain individual differences in rates of cognitive decline, but its potential role as a mediating pathway has seldom been explored using data from large epidemiological studies. We explored the mediating effect of cognitive reserve on the cross-sectional association between lifestyle factors and cognitive function in later life using data from a population-based cohort of healthy older people.
We analysed data from 2,315 cognitively healthy participants aged 65 y and over in the Cognitive Function and Ageing Study Wales (CFAS-Wales) cohort collected in 2011-2013. Linear regression modelling was used to investigate the overall associations between five lifestyle factors-cognitive and social activity, physical activity, diet, alcohol consumption, and smoking-and cognition, adjusting for demographic factors and chronic conditions. Mediation analysis tested for indirect effects of the lifestyle factors on cognition via cognitive reserve. After controlling for age, gender, and the presence of chronic conditions, cognitive and social activity, physical activity, healthy diet, and light-to-moderate alcohol consumption were positively associated with cognitive function, together accounting for 20% (95% CI 17%-23%) of variance in cognitive test scores. Cognitive reserve was an important mediator of this association, with indirect effects via cognitive reserve contributing 21% (95% CI 15%-27%) of the overall effect on cognition. The main limitations of the study derive from the cross-sectional nature of the data and the challenges of accurately measuring the latent construct of cognitive reserve.
Cross-sectional associations support the view that enhancing cognitive reserve may benefit cognition, and maintenance of cognitive health may be supported by a healthy and active lifestyle, in later life.
潜在可改变的生活方式因素可能会影响晚年的认知健康,并具有降低认知能力下降和痴呆风险的潜力。认知储备的概念已被提出作为解释认知能力下降速度个体差异的一种机制,但很少使用大型流行病学研究的数据来探讨其作为中介途径的潜在作用。我们使用来自一个以健康老年人为基础的队列的数据,探讨了认知储备对晚年生活方式因素与认知功能之间横断面关联的中介作用。
我们分析了2011 - 2013年收集的威尔士认知功能与衰老研究(CFAS - Wales)队列中2315名65岁及以上认知健康参与者的数据。线性回归模型用于研究五个生活方式因素(认知和社交活动、体育活动、饮食、饮酒和吸烟)与认知之间的总体关联,并对人口统计学因素和慢性病进行了调整。中介分析测试了生活方式因素通过认知储备对认知的间接影响。在控制了年龄、性别和慢性病的存在后,认知和社交活动、体育活动、健康饮食以及轻度至中度饮酒与认知功能呈正相关,共同解释了认知测试分数方差的20%(95%CI 17% - 23%)。认知储备是这种关联的重要中介,通过认知储备的间接影响占对认知总体影响的21%(95%CI 15% - 27%)。该研究的主要局限性源于数据的横断面性质以及准确测量认知储备潜在结构的挑战。
横断面关联支持这样一种观点,即增强认知储备可能有益于认知,并且在晚年,健康积极的生活方式可能有助于维持认知健康。