Among neurologically normal volunteers approaching age 65 with an option for retirement, a four-year prospective longitudinal study was designed to examine effects of different levels of physical activity on cerebral perfusion by between-group comparisons. After the fourth year, cognitive performance was also tested. Three groups were compared, each composed of 30 elderly volunteers, assigned as follows: Group 1, who continued to work; Group 2, who retired but participated in regular physical activities; and Group 3, who retired but did not participate in regular, planned physical activities. Retirees who elected to become physically inactive exhibited significant declines in cerebral blood flow (CBF) throughout four years of follow-up. Those who continued to work or retirees who elected to participate in regular activities sustained more constant CBF levels. Active retirees and those who continued to work also scored better on cognitive testing after the fourth year of follow-up compared to inactive retirees.
Cross-sectional analysis of CBF values was carried out among 668 volunteers and patients. Subjects were subdivided according to age, gender, and degree of cerebrovascular disease, ranging from healthy volunteers with or without risk factors for stroke to patients with multi-infarct dementia. Four-year longitudinal analysis was also carried out on 230 individuals from the original sample. Decrements in CBF values were evidenced by both cross-sectional and longitudinal analysis in relation to advancing age, progressive cerebrovascular disease, and dementia. Regional, age-related CBF declines in healthy volunteers were heterogeneous, possibly related to changes in levels of functional activity within different brain regions.
Education and occupation as sociodemographic risk factors for dementias of the Alzheimer (DAT) and ischemic vascular types (IVD) were evaluated by two case series studies. Cases were compared to well-evaluated individuals identified as healthy normals acting as controls. There were 150 patients with probable DAT, 102 patients with probable IVD, and 188 neurologically and cognitively normal subjects. Logistic regression indicated that for DAT, education with occupation was the best predictor (OR, 1.51; 95% CI, 1.23–1.87). For IVD, the two predictors were: education with occupation (OR, 1.84; 95% CI 1.38–4.50) and education with gender (OR, 3.40; 95% CI, 1.29–8.92). We conclude that risk of dementia is increased in those with limited educational background and occupational achievement.
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