## Abstract ## Objective To collect new primary data on community‐based health utilities (time trade‐off values) in different stages of mild cognitive impairment and dementia from a general population sample. ## Methods A cross‐sectional study including 1,800 randomly selected members of the Swe
Disability and mild cognitive impairment: a longitudinal population-based study
✍ Scribed by Sylvaine Artero; Jacques Touchon; Karen Ritchie
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 75 KB
- Volume
- 16
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-6230
- DOI
- 10.1002/gps.477
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Objective
To determine whether mild cognitive deficit is associated with parallel changes in ability to perform activities of daily living.
Background
While considerable research has been conducted on the effect of senile dementia and other neurodegenerative disorders on ability to perform everyday activities, little is known about the much larger group of elderly persons suffering from mild cognitive deficits.
Methods
Disability prevalence was estimated in 368 persons over the age of 65 years recruited from the general population via a general practitioner network. Subjects were followed over a 3‐year period using computerized cognitive assessment and observations of everyday functioning. Standardized neurological assessment in the third year permitted the identification of subjects who have evolved towards dementia.
Results
An overall disability prevalence was found in the general population of 26.3%, with 30.8% in subjects with sub‐clinical cognitive impairment. Longitudinal follow‐up showed cognitive decline over time without dementia to be paralleled by changes in activity performance, with visuospatial deficits having the most marked effect on overall functioning. High intelligence quotient (IQ) and education are seen to reduce the degree of activity loss, but only when senile dementia is not present.
Conclusions
Difficulties in the performance of everyday activities were found more frequently in non‐demented subjects with mild cognitive deficits than in the general population. High pre‐morbid levels of ability are seen to have a protective effect. A diagnosis of dementia should not therefore be required by persons with cognitive impairment applying for home help. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
An 8-year-long longitudinal study of elderly people in Botany (Sydney) has provided data on the prevalence, incidence and outcome of cognitive impairment and depression in this population. In 1985, a random sample of 146 persons aged 65 years or more, living in their own Lomes, were assessed using t
## Abstract ## Objective We aimed to investigate the association between nocturnal sleep duration, changes in nocturnal sleep duration and cognitive impairment in older adults. ## Methods 4010 participants of a population‐based cohort study provided information on nocturnal sleep duration at bas
## Abstract ## Objective To investigate the association of midlife dietary fat intake to cognitive performance, and to the occurrence of clinical mild cognitive impairment (MCI) later in life in a non‐demented population. ## Design A longitudinal population‐based study. ## Setting Populations