AbstractBackgroundNeurobehavioral changes in cognitively intact individuals may represent early indicators of underlying pathophysiological processes such as the development of tau related changes in the brain. Research assessing tau pathology with PET has shown a relationship between tau accumulation in the inferior temporal lobes and entorhinal cortex and depression and tau accumulation in the right entorhinal cortex and loneliness. The current research investigated the relationship between levels of plasma tau and measures of depression, anxiety and worry in a community‐based sample of cognitively normal older adults.MethodParticipants were drawn from a community‐based, longitudinal study of cognitive aging in Mexican‐Americans. 415 cognitively normal Mexican Americans (328 females, 87 males) and 134 cognitively normal non‐Hispanic whites (95 females, 39 males) were administered the Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS), the Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI)and the Penn State Worry Questionnaire PSWQ). Plasma tau was assayed via Single Molecule Array (Simoa) technology. Data were analyzed using t tests and ANOVA.ResultThere was no significant main effect for plasma tau on any of the emotional measures. To assess the possible impact of level of tau, the sample was divided into those in the highest quartile of tau (N=89) and those in the lower three quartiles of tau (N=460). Analyses controlling for age, education and gender revealed that those in the highest quartile scored significantly higher on GDS total score (p= .011), three of the four subscales of the GDS (Dysphoria p=.020; Apathy p=.021; Cognitive Impairment p=.029), the BAI (p=.005) and the PSWQ (.003).ConclusionIn cognitively normal elderly, higher levels of plasma tau were significantly related to measures of emotional functioning with significantly greater endorsement of symptoms of depression, anxiety and worry. The presence of high levels of these symptoms and higher levels of plasma tau may be an indicator of preclinical Alzheimer’s disease. Longitudinal research is needed to assess the strength of these factors in later cognitive decline and may suggest areas for early intervention.
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