2016
DOI: 10.1007/s11065-015-9312-y
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The Combined Effect of Neuropsychological and Neuropathological Deficits on Instrumental Activities of Daily Living in Older Adults: a Systematic Review

Abstract: To date, studies have consistently demonstrated associations between either neuropsychological deficits or neuroanatomical changes and instrumental activities of daily living (IADL) in aging. Only a limited number of studies have evaluated morphological brain changes and neuropsychological test performance concurrently in relation to IADL in this population. As a result, it remains largely unknown whether these factors independently predict functional outcome. The current systematic review intended to address … Show more

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Cited by 91 publications
(68 citation statements)
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References 100 publications
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“…Our analysis suggests specific interventions for patients with blood cancers and impaired iADLs beyond addressing the individual iADL dependencies themselves. In our cohort, probable executive dysfunction, multimorbidity, physical dysfunction, and psychosocial vulnerability were each independently associated with a higher risk of being dependent in one or more iADLs—consistent with other nononcologic populations of older adults . Geriatric assessment not only detects these vulnerabilities, but can guide interventions aimed at reversing them …”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 77%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Our analysis suggests specific interventions for patients with blood cancers and impaired iADLs beyond addressing the individual iADL dependencies themselves. In our cohort, probable executive dysfunction, multimorbidity, physical dysfunction, and psychosocial vulnerability were each independently associated with a higher risk of being dependent in one or more iADLs—consistent with other nononcologic populations of older adults . Geriatric assessment not only detects these vulnerabilities, but can guide interventions aimed at reversing them …”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 77%
“…In our cohort, probable executive dysfunction, multimorbidity, physical dysfunction, and psychosocial vulnerability were each independently associated with a higher risk of being dependent in one or more iADLs-consistent with other nononcologic populations of older adults. [41][42][43] Geriatric assessment not only detects these vulnerabilities, but can guide interventions aimed at reversing them. 44,45 First, identifying cognitive impairment-found in our prior work to be prevalent in our population and itself linked to survival 17 -provides an opportunity to treat reversible contributors (eg, sensory impairment 46 ) and to recommend social and safety supports.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is encouraging, given the role of memory and executive cognitive functions on performance of instrumental activities of daily living among older adults. 40 The rate of impairment found in this study falls in the middle of those reported elsewhere, possibly due to the older age of our sample.…”
Section: Predictors Of Cognitive Impairmentcontrasting
confidence: 41%
“…Importantly, there was improvement in several cognitive domains between the two time periods, particularly phonemic fluency and memory. This is encouraging, given the role of memory and executive cognitive functions on performance of instrumental activities of daily living among older adults …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…Executive functioning is the most consistently cited cognitive domain in research focused on predicting instrumental activities of daily living in older adults (40) and neurological populations (41). Of note, longitudinal decline in executive functioning and memory is associated with concomittant decline in instrumental activities of daily living in older adults both with and without MCI (38).…”
Section: Implications For Self-managementmentioning
confidence: 99%