Dong Jing, Pinto Jayant M, Guo Xuguang, Alonso Alvaro, Tranah Gregory, Cauley Jane A, Garcia Melissa, Satterfield Suzanne, Huang Xuemei, Harris Tamara, Mosley Thomas H, Chen Honglei
Epidemiology Branch, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina.
Section of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Department of Surgery, The University of Chicago Medicine and Biological Sciences, Illinois.
J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci. 2017 Aug 1;72(8):1080-1086. doi: 10.1093/gerona/glx081.
Olfactory impairment is common among older adults; however, data are largely limited to whites.
We conducted pooled analyses of two community-based studies: the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities study (ARIC, 1,398 blacks and 4,665 whites), and the Health, Aging, and Body Composition study (Health ABC, 958 blacks and 1,536 whites) to determine the prevalence of anosmia and associated factors for black and white older adults in the United States.
The overall prevalence of anosmia was 22.3% among blacks and 10.4% among whites. Blacks had a markedly higher odds of anosmia compared to whites in age and sex adjusted analyses (odds ratio [OR] 2.96, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 2.59-3.38). In both blacks and whites, higher anosmia prevalence was associated with older age and male sex. The highest prevalence was found in black men 85 years or older (58.3%), and the lowest in white women aged 65-69 years (2.4%). Higher education level, lower cognitive score, ApoE ε4, daytime sleepiness, poorer general health status, lower body mass index, and Parkinson disease were associated with higher prevalence of anosmia in one or both races. However, the racial difference in anosmia remained statistically significant after adjusting for these factors (fully adjusted OR = 1.76, 95%CI: 1.50-2.07). Results were comparable between the two cohorts.
Anosmia is common in older adults, particularly among blacks. Further studies are needed to identify risk factors for anosmia and to investigate racial disparities in this sensory deficit.
嗅觉障碍在老年人中很常见;然而,数据大多局限于白人。
我们对两项基于社区的研究进行了汇总分析:社区动脉粥样硬化风险研究(ARIC,1398名黑人及4665名白人)和健康、衰老与身体成分研究(Health ABC,958名黑人及1536名白人),以确定美国黑人和白人老年人中嗅觉丧失的患病率及相关因素。
黑人中嗅觉丧失的总体患病率为22.3%,白人中为10.4%。在年龄和性别调整分析中,与白人相比,黑人嗅觉丧失的几率显著更高(优势比[OR]为2.96,95%置信区间[CI]=2.59 - 3.38)。在黑人和白人中,较高的嗅觉丧失患病率均与年龄较大和男性性别相关。患病率最高的是85岁及以上的黑人男性(58.3%),最低的是65 - 69岁的白人女性(2.4%)。在一个或两个种族中,较高的教育水平、较低的认知得分、载脂蛋白E ε4、日间嗜睡、较差的总体健康状况、较低的体重指数和帕金森病与较高的嗅觉丧失患病率相关。然而,在对这些因素进行调整后,嗅觉丧失的种族差异仍具有统计学意义(完全调整后的OR = 1.76,95%CI:1.50 - 2.07)。两个队列的结果具有可比性。
嗅觉丧失在老年人中很常见,尤其是在黑人中。需要进一步研究以确定嗅觉丧失的危险因素,并调查这种感觉缺陷中的种族差异。