Tran Yvonne, Tang Diana, Lo Charles, McMahon Catherine, Mitchell Paul, Gopinath Bamini
MU Hearing, Department of Linguistics, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Management Disciplinary Group, Wentworth Institute for Higher Education, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Front Aging Neurosci. 2021 Dec 24;13:794787. doi: 10.3389/fnagi.2021.794787. eCollection 2021.
Hearing loss and cognitive impairments are both highly prevalent neurological complications for older adults. While there is growing evidence to suggest that these two conditions are interrelated, little research has been conducted that directly examines the progression and developmental trajectories of these complications contemporaneously. The aim of the study is to identify the distinct trajectory profiles for hearing loss and cognitive function in an older population over a 10-year period. Through dual trajectory modeling, the interrelationship, co-occurring movements, and overlaps between these two complications were examined. We also investigated the influence of hearing aid ownership on cognitive function trajectories. We utilized longitudinal data from 1,445 participants in the Blue Mountains Hearing Study (aged 55+ years) involving repeated measures from a population-based survey with audiometric hearing assessments. Cognitive function was assessed using the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE). The group-based trajectory modeling (GBTM) identified three trajectory profiles for both hearing loss and cognitive function in two older age groups (55-69 years and 70+ years). The outputs from the dual trajectories models showed the conditional probability for "no hearing loss" trajectories to be around 90% more likely to have "high-normal" cognitive function, demonstrating co-occurring overlap. In contrast, for "moderate to severe hearing loss" trajectories, the conditional probability drops to 65% and 79% for the 55-69 age group and 70+ age group respectively. There was also an increasing probability for "cognitive decline" conditional on the severity of hearing loss with 6.7%, 7.5%, and 8.7% for no hearing loss, mild hearing loss, and moderate to severe hearing loss trajectory groups. While we did not find any statistically significant difference in the influence of hearing aid use in the cognitive function trajectories, there was a consistent greater representation of non-hearing aid users in the trajectories with poorer cognitive function. This study found GBTM to identify trajectories that were in agreement with our current understanding of hearing loss and cognitive impairment in older adults. This study also adds to the existing evidence-base as dual trajectories demonstrated co-occurrence in developmental changes in these two common neurological complications for the older population.
听力损失和认知障碍都是老年人中非常普遍的神经并发症。虽然越来越多的证据表明这两种情况相互关联,但很少有研究直接同时考察这些并发症的进展和发展轨迹。本研究的目的是确定老年人群在10年期间听力损失和认知功能的不同轨迹特征。通过双轨迹建模,研究了这两种并发症之间的相互关系、共同出现的变化以及重叠情况。我们还调查了助听器使用对认知功能轨迹的影响。我们利用了蓝山听力研究中1445名参与者(年龄在55岁及以上)的纵向数据,这些数据来自一项基于人群的调查中的重复测量,并伴有听力测量评估。认知功能使用简易精神状态检查表(MMSE)进行评估。基于群体的轨迹建模(GBTM)在两个老年年龄组(55 - 69岁和70岁及以上)中确定了听力损失和认知功能的三种轨迹特征。双轨迹模型的输出结果显示,“无听力损失”轨迹出现“高正常”认知功能的条件概率要高出约90%,表明存在共同出现的重叠情况。相比之下,对于“中度至重度听力损失”轨迹,55 - 69岁年龄组和70岁及以上年龄组的条件概率分别降至65%和79%。根据听力损失的严重程度,“认知衰退”的概率也在增加,无听力损失、轻度听力损失和中度至重度听力损失轨迹组的概率分别为6.7%、7.5%和8.7%。虽然我们没有发现助听器使用对认知功能轨迹的影响存在任何统计学上的显著差异,但在认知功能较差的轨迹中,非助听器使用者的比例始终更高。本研究发现GBTM能够识别与我们目前对老年人听力损失和认知障碍的理解相一致的轨迹。这项研究还增加了现有证据基础,因为双轨迹表明这两种常见神经并发症在老年人群的发育变化中共同出现。