Cognitive Ageing and Impairment Neurosciences Laboratory, School of Psychology, Social Work and Social Policy, University of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia.
Newcastle University Institute for Ageing and Institute of Health and Society, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK.
J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci. 2018 Mar 14;73(4):499-505. doi: 10.1093/gerona/glx140.
The oldest-old (aged ≥85 years) are the fastest growing age group, with the highest risk of cognitive impairment and dementia. This study investigated whether cognitive reserve applies to the oldest-old. This has implications for cognitive interventions in this age group.
Baseline and 5-year follow-up data from the Newcastle 85+ Study were used (N = 845, mean age = 85.5, 38% male). A Cognitive Reserve Index (CRI) was created, including: education, social class, marital status, engagement in mental activities, social participation, and physical activity. Global (Mini-Mental State Examination) and domain specific (Cognitive Drug Research Battery subtests assessing memory, attention, and speed) cognitive functions were assessed. Dementia diagnosis was determined by health records. Logistic regression analysis examined the association between CRI scores and incident dementia. Mixed effects models investigated baseline and longitudinal associations between the CRI scores and cognitive function. Analyses controlled for sex, age, depression, and cardiovascular disease history.
Higher reserve associated with better cognitive performance on all baseline measures, but not 5-year rate of change. The CRI associated with prevalent, but not incident dementia.
In the oldest-old, higher reserve associated with better baseline global and domain-specific cognitive function and reduced risk of prevalent dementia; but not cognitive decline or incident dementia. Increasing reserve could promote cognitive function in the oldest-old. The results suggest there would be little impact on trajectories, but replication is needed. Development of preventative strategies would benefit from identifying the role of each factor in building reserve and why rate of change is not affected.
最年长的老年人(年龄≥85 岁)是增长最快的年龄组,认知障碍和痴呆的风险最高。本研究调查了认知储备是否适用于最年长的老年人。这对该年龄组的认知干预具有重要意义。
使用纽卡斯尔 85+研究的基线和 5 年随访数据(N=845,平均年龄 85.5,38%为男性)。创建了认知储备指数(CRI),包括:教育、社会阶层、婚姻状况、参与脑力活动、社会参与和身体活动。评估了整体(简易精神状态检查)和特定领域(认知药物研究电池子测试评估记忆、注意力和速度)认知功能。痴呆诊断由健康记录确定。逻辑回归分析检查了 CRI 分数与新发痴呆之间的关联。混合效应模型调查了 CRI 分数与认知功能之间的基线和纵向关联。分析控制了性别、年龄、抑郁和心血管疾病史。
更高的储备与所有基线测量的更好认知表现相关,但与 5 年的变化率无关。CRI 与现患痴呆相关,但与新发痴呆无关。
在最年长的老年人中,较高的储备与更好的基线整体和特定领域认知功能以及降低现患痴呆风险相关;但与认知下降或新发痴呆无关。增加储备可以促进最年长老年人的认知功能。结果表明,对轨迹的影响不大,但需要进行复制。制定预防策略将受益于确定每个因素在建立储备中的作用以及为什么变化率不受影响。