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The Temporal Relation of Physical Function with Cognition and the Influence of Brain Health in the Oldest-Old.

Authors :
Legdeur, Nienke
Badissi, Maryam
Venkatraghavan, Vikram
Woodworth, Davis C.
Orlhac, Fanny
Vidal, Jean-Sébastien
Barkhof, Frederik
Kawas, Claudia H.
Visser, Pieter Jelle
Corrada, María M.
Muller, Majon
Rhodius-Meester, Hanneke F.M.
Source :
Gerontology. Nov2024, p1-15. 15p. 3 Illustrations.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

<bold><italic>Introduction:</italic></bold> Physical function and cognition seem to be interrelated, especially in the oldest-old. However, the temporal order in which they are related and the role of brain health remain uncertain. <bold><italic>Methods:</italic></bold> We included 338 participants (mean age 93.1 years) from two longitudinal cohorts: the UCI 90+ Study and EMIF-AD 90+ Study. We tested the association between physical function (Short Physical Performance Battery, gait speed, and handgrip strength) at baseline with cognitive decline (MMSE, memory tests, animal fluency, Trail Making Test (TMT-) A, and digit span backward) and the association between cognition at baseline with physical decline (mean follow-up 3.3 years). We also tested whether measures for brain health (hippocampal, white matter lesion, and gray matter volume) were related to physical function and cognition and whether brain health was a common driver of the association between physical function and cognition by adding it as confounder (if applicable). <bold><italic>Results:</italic></bold> Better performance on all physical tests at baseline was associated with less decline on MMSE, memory, and TMT-A. Conversely, fewer associations were significant, but better scores on memory, TMT-A, and digit span backward were associated with less physical decline. When adding measures for brain health as confounder, all associations stayed significant except for memory with gait speed decline. <bold><italic>Conclusion:</italic></bold> In the oldest-old, physical function and cognition are strongly related, independently of brain health. Also, the association between physical function and cognitive decline is more pronounced than the other way around, suggesting a potential for slowing cognitive decline by optimizing physical function. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0304324X
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Gerontology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
181405201
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1159/000542395