Results demonstrate the importance of MCI as a clinical entity that not only predicts progression to dementia, but also predicts functional declines in activities that are key to autonomy and quality of life. MCI classification guidelines should allow for functional changes in MCI, and clinicians should monitor for such changes. Preservation of function may serve as a meaningful outcome for intervention efforts.
Medical comorbidity was a significant predictor of rehabilitation efficiency in geriatric patients. Comorbidity scores >5 were prognostic of poorer rehabilitation outcomes and can serve as an empirical guide in estimating a patient's suitability for rehabilitation. Medical comorbidity predicted both the overall functional change achieved with retabilitation (Functional Independence Measure gains) and the rate at with which those gains were reached (rehabilitation efficiency ratio).
Cognitive training improves mental abilities in older adults, but the trainability of persons with memory impairment is unclear. We conducted a subgroup analysis of subjects in the Advanced Cognitive Training for Independent and Vital Elderly (ACTIVE) trial to examine this issue. ACTIVE enrolled 2802 non-demented, community-dwelling adults aged 65 years and older and randomly assigned them to one of four groups: Memory training, reasoning training, speed-of-processing training, or no-contact control. For this study, participants were defined as memory-impaired if baseline Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test (AVLT) sum recall score was 1.5 SD or more below predicted AVLT sum recall score from a regression-derived formula using age, education, ethnicity, and vocabulary from all subjects at baseline. Assessments were taken at baseline (BL), post-test, first annual (A1), and second annual (A2) follow-up. One hundred and ninety-three subjects were defined as memory-impaired and 2580 were memory-normal. Training gain as a function memory status (impaired vs. normal) was compared in a mixed effects model. Results indicated that memoryimpaired participants failed to benefit from Memory training but did show normal training gains after reasoning and speed training. Memory function appears to mediate response to structured cognitive interventions in older adults.
Objective
Examine the relationship of demographics and health conditions, alone and in combination, on objective measures of cognitive function in a large sample of community-dwelling older adults.
Method
Baseline data from 2782 participants in the ACTIVE study were used to examine relationships of demographics and health conditions with composite scores of memory, reasoning, and speed of processing.
Results
Younger age, increased education, and white race were independently associated with better performance in each cognitive domain after adjusting for gender and health conditions. Male gender, diabetes, and suspected clinical depression were associated with poorer cognitive functioning; suspected clinical depression was associated with lower reasoning and diabetes and history of stroke with slower speed of processing.
Discussion
Age, education, and race are consistently associated with cognitive performance in this sample of older community-dwelling adults. Diabetes, stroke, and suspected clinical depression had independent but weaker affects on cognition.
A substantial portion of elderly patients admitted for inpatient rehabilitation treatment evidence cognitive dysfunction. Frequently, such patients also present with considerable medical comorbidity, that is, multiple concurrent illnesses. Identifying the potential role of cumulative illness in the etiology of cognitive decline in this group of frail elderly is limited by a lack of empirical information as little is known about this relationship. The goal of the present research was thus to investigate the relationship between cumulative illness and cognitive dysfunction while controlling for age and neurological and psychiatric symptomatology as these are previously known to affect cognitive function. Results indicate that cumulative illness predicts neuropsychological decline beyond the effects attributable to advanced age, mood, neurological pathology and psychiatric impairments. Even mild illness, if cumulative across several physical systems, can be predictive of cognitive deficits in this frail population. Of 11 organ systems studied, impairment of the vascular system was associated with the most diffuse profile of declined neuropsychological performance. Performances on measures of reasoning and judgment showed the strongest associations with cumulative illness. Implications of findings for neuropsychological diagnosis and prognosis are reviewed.
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