Abstract
Abstract Background/Introduction The association between atrial fibrillation and cognitive dysfunction has accumulated a growing body of evidence in recent years. However, establishing such a diagnosis remains challenging, especially in mild oligosymptomatic patients. REMEDES for Alzheimer (R4Alz) is a novel test, designed to assess cognitive control decline at an early stage. Purpose We sought to evaluate the prevalence of early, mild cognitive dysfunction in patients with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation with the use of established and novel diagnostic tools. Methods This is a prospective cross-sectional study that enrolled consecutive patients with history of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation and matched healthy controls, from a tertiary cardiology department. Patients with history of stroke or known cognitive dysfunction of any type were excluded from the study. Demographic and clinical data were collected. All study participants were subjected to Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) and to R4Alz within the same day. Cognitive function and attention ability is assessed at three stages with R4Alz: working memory updating (R1), supervisory attention system (R2) and task/rule switching and control of inhibition (R3). The primary endpoint was the difference in cognitive function between patients with atrial fibrillation and controls. Secondary endpoints included the correlation between the two assessment tests in both groups. Statistical analysis was performed with R version 4.1.0 and a p-value<0.05 was considered statistically significant. Results Fifty-five patients with atrial fibrillation and thirty-four controls were enrolled in the study (Mean age: 62.6 y, Female gender: 62.9%). MoCA scores (25.4 ± 4.11 for patients with atrial fibrillation vs 22.3 ± 3.72 for healthy controls, p-value <0.001) (Figure 1) as well as scores of all stages of R4ALz {working memory (R1a, R1b, R1c), supervisory attention system (R2) and task/rule switching – inhibition control (R3a1, R3a2, R3b)} were indicative of mild cognitive dysfunction in patients with atrial fibrillation. The control group exhibited significantly better cognitive performance on all assessment tools (Table 1).Figure 1Table 1
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