Sano Mary, Zhu Carolyn W, Grossman Hillel, Schimming Corbett
Alzheimer's Disease Research Center, Department of Psychiatry, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY.
James J Peters VAMC, Bronx, NY.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2017 Oct;65(10):2198-2204. doi: 10.1111/jgs.15014. Epub 2017 Aug 3.
Diabetes is a risk factor for the development of cognitive impairment and possibly for accelerated progression to Alzheimer disease (AD) and other dementias, though the trajectory of cognitive decline in general and in specfic cognitive domains by diabetes is unclear.
Using the National Alzheimer's Coordinating Center's Uniform Data Det (NACC-UDS) to identify cohorts of elders with normal cognition (N = 7,663) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI, N = 4,114), we compared overall cognitive composite and domain specific sub-scores and their progression over time between diabetic and non-diabetic subjects.
Diabetes was more common among those with MCI (14.7%) than among subjects who were cognitively normal (11.7%). In subjects who were cognitively normal, baseline cognitive composite scores, attention, and executive function sub-scores were lower in diabetics than non-diabetics (by 0.098, 0.066, and 0.015 points, respectively). Over time, cognitive composite score showed subtle worsening in non-diabetics (0.025 points every 6 months), with an additional worsening of 0.01 points every 6 months in diabetics compared to non-diabetics. In the MCI groups, baseline cognitive composite as well as attention and executive domain sub-scores were lower in diabetics than non-diabetics (by 0.078, 0.092, and 0.032 points, respectively). Over time, cognitive composite (by 0.103 points every 6 months) and all domain specific sub-scores showed subtle worsening in non-diabetics, but diabetics had significantly slower worsening than non-diabetics on both cognitive composite (by 0.028 points) and domain specific sub-scores.
Among elders, diabetes may be associated with lower cognitive performance, primarily in non-memory domains. However it is not associated with continued worsening, suggesting a static deficit with minimal memory involvement. This data suggest that diabetes may contribute more to a vascular profile of cognitive impairment than a profile more typical of AD.
糖尿病是认知功能障碍发生的一个危险因素,可能也是加速发展为阿尔茨海默病(AD)和其他痴呆症的危险因素,不过糖尿病导致的总体认知衰退轨迹以及特定认知领域的衰退轨迹尚不清楚。
利用国家阿尔茨海默病协调中心的统一数据档案(NACC-UDS)来确定认知正常的老年人队列(N = 7663)和轻度认知障碍(MCI,N = 4114)队列,我们比较了糖尿病患者和非糖尿病患者的总体认知综合得分和特定领域子得分及其随时间的变化情况。
MCI患者中糖尿病更为常见(14.7%),高于认知正常的受试者(11.7%)。在认知正常的受试者中,糖尿病患者的基线认知综合得分、注意力和执行功能子得分低于非糖尿病患者(分别低0.098、0.066和0.015分)。随着时间推移,认知综合得分在非糖尿病患者中显示出轻微恶化(每6个月0.025分),与非糖尿病患者相比,糖尿病患者每6个月额外恶化0.01分。在MCI组中,糖尿病患者的基线认知综合得分以及注意力和执行领域子得分低于非糖尿病患者(分别低0.078、0.092和0.032分)。随着时间推移,认知综合得分(每6个月0.103分)和所有特定领域子得分在非糖尿病患者中显示出轻微恶化,但糖尿病患者在认知综合得分(低0.028分)和特定领域子得分方面的恶化明显慢于非糖尿病患者。
在老年人中,糖尿病可能与较低的认知表现相关,主要在非记忆领域。然而,它与持续恶化无关,提示存在静态缺陷且记忆受累最小。这些数据表明,糖尿病对认知障碍血管型的影响可能大于对更典型AD型的影响。