From the, Division of Clinical Geriatrics, Center for Alzheimer Research, Department of Neurobiology, Care Sciences and Society, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
Faculty of Sport and Health Sciences and Gerontology Research Center, University of Jyväskylä, Jyväskylä, Finland.
J Intern Med. 2021 Jun;289(6):807-830. doi: 10.1111/joim.13227. Epub 2021 Jan 10.
Ageing of the population, together with population growth, has brought along an ample increase in the number of older individuals living with dementia and disabilities. Dementia is the main cause of disability in old age, and promoting healthy brain ageing is considered as a key element in diminishing the burden of age-related disabilities. The World Health Organization recently launched the first risk reduction guidelines for cognitive impairment and dementia. According to recent estimates, approximately 40% of dementia cases worldwide could be attributable to 12 modifiable risk factors: low education; midlife hypertension and obesity; diabetes, smoking, excessive alcohol use, physical inactivity, depression, low social contact, hearing loss, traumatic brain injury and air pollution indicating clear prevention potential. Dementia and physical disability are closely linked with shared risk factors and possible shared underlying mechanisms supporting the possibility of integrated preventive interventions. FINGER trial was the first large randomized controlled trial indicating that multidomain lifestyle-based intervention can prevent cognitive and functional decline amongst at-risk older adults from the general population. Within the World-Wide FINGERS network, the multidomain FINGER concept is now tested and adapted worldwide proving evidence and tools for effective and easily implementable preventive strategies. Close collaboration between researchers, policymakers and healthcare practitioners, involvement of older adults and utilization of new technologies to support self-management is needed to facilitate the implementation of the research findings. In this scoping review, we present the current scientific evidence in the field of dementia and disability prevention and discuss future directions in the field.
人口老龄化以及人口增长,使得患有痴呆症和残疾的老年人数量大量增加。痴呆症是老年人残疾的主要原因,促进大脑健康老化被认为是减轻与年龄相关残疾负担的关键因素。世界卫生组织最近发布了首份认知障碍和痴呆症风险降低指南。根据最近的估计,全球约 40%的痴呆症病例可能归因于 12 个可改变的风险因素:受教育程度低、中年高血压和肥胖、糖尿病、吸烟、过度饮酒、缺乏身体活动、抑郁、社交联系少、听力损失、脑外伤和空气污染,这表明有明显的预防潜力。痴呆症和身体残疾与共同的风险因素密切相关,可能存在共同的潜在机制,支持综合预防干预的可能性。FINGER 试验是首个大型随机对照试验,表明多领域基于生活方式的干预可以预防一般人群中高危老年人的认知和功能下降。在全球范围内的 FINGER 网络中,多领域的 FINGER 概念正在进行测试和适应,为有效的、易于实施的预防策略提供证据和工具。研究人员、政策制定者和医疗保健从业者之间需要密切合作,让老年人参与进来并利用新技术来支持自我管理,以促进研究成果的实施。在本次范围综述中,我们介绍了痴呆症和残疾预防领域的当前科学证据,并讨论了该领域的未来方向。