Abstract

Studies of modifiable dementia risk factors (MDRFs) generally consider MDRFs individually, despite strong evidence that they co-occur in adult populations. In a large sample of middle-aged adults, this study aimed to determine the frequency and co-occurrence of MDRFs, spanning five domains (mood symptomatology, risky lifestyle behaviors, cardiovascular conditions, cognitive/social engagement, sleep disorders/symptomatology). The relationship between number of domains in which MDRFs were reported with cognitive performance and subjective cognitive concerns was then determined. Middle-aged adults (n = 1,610) enrolled in the Healthy Brain Project and completed self-report surveys about their health and lifestyle. Participants also completed the Cogstate Brief Battery and the Cognitive Function Instrument, a measure of subjective ratings of cognition. Participants were classified according to number of domains (mood symptomatology, risky lifestyle behaviors, cardiovascular conditions, cognitive/social engagement, sleep disorders/symptomatology) in which they reported at least one MDRF (0-5). Age, sex, education, and ethnicity were adjusted for in analyses. Most individuals (66.5%) reported MDRFs in two or more domains. Compared with individuals displaying no MDRFs, individuals with MDRFs in 3-5 domains showed worse learning/working memory performance and greater subjective cognitive concerns, with the magnitude of these differences moderate-to-large (d = 0.30-0.93). Individuals displaying MDRFs in five domains also showed worse attention/psychomotor function (d = 0.58) compared to those displaying no MDRFs. These findings may suggest that multidomain MDRFs are highly frequent in middle-aged adults and are related to poorer cognition. This supports that modifiable dementia risk is multidimensional and raises the possibility that multidomain behavioral intervention trials in middle-aged adults may be useful to delay or prevent cognitive impairment or decline. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call