9 research outputs found

    'Camminando e Leggendo... 'Ricordo' (Walking and Reading... i Remember): Prevention of Frailty through the Promotion of Physical Activity and Reading in People with Mild Cognitive Impairment. Results from the TREDEM Registry

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    Background: Frailty is a condition of increased vulnerability to exogenous and endogenous stressors, which is correlated with aging, functional decline, institutionalization, hospitalization, and mortality. Given the multifaceted nature of frailty, programs aimed at its prevention are recommended to act on multiple domains. Objective: The present intervention program aimed at assessing the effects of combined physical and cognitive training in older people with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and at investigating how their frailty status changed over one year of follow-up. Methods: Two-hundred and seven participants were recruited among outpatients of the Cognitive Impairment Center who agreed to receive a comprehensive assessment. Forty-six participants, who joined a structured program of physical activity and group readings for a period of one year, were defined as active. The remaining 161, who decided not to engage in those activities, were considered controls. In both groups, frailty status was assessed at baseline and over one year of follow-up. Results: Control participants showed twice the risk of becoming frail at 12 months compared with those in the active group. Participants in the active group had more than three times the probability of improving their frailty status compared with the control group from T0 to T12. Age and NPI scores were significantly associated with worsening frailty status. When analyses were restricted to participants who were robust at baseline, the frailty status varied significantly between groups over time. Conclusion: Findings of the present study confirm the beneficial effects of physical activity and reading to prevent frailty in older people with MCI

    Association between the frailty index and vascular brain damage: The Treviso Dementia (TREDEM) registry

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    Purpose: An association between frailty and vascular brain damage (VBD) has been described in older adults. However, most studies have identified frailty according to the phenotypic model. It is less clear whether frailty, operationalized as an accumulation of health deficits, is associated with the presence and severity of VBD. The present study was therefore undertaken to verify whether a 50-item frailty index (FI) is related to VBD in a large and relatively unselected cohort of attendees of a memory clinic. Materials and methods: The TREDEM (Treviso Dementia) registry includes retrospective observational data of 1584 participants. A modified FI was calculated from 50 variables comprising diseases, disability, behavioral disorders, and blood biochemistry. The presence and severity of VBD, including leukoaraiosis, lacunes, larger infarctions and the hierarchical vascular rating scale (HVRS), were determined based on brain computerized tomography imaging. Multiple logistic regression models were built according to the stepwise method. Results: Mean age of the 1584 participants was 79.6 ± 7.5 years and 1033 (65.2 %) were females. The average number of health deficits was 11.6 ± 6.2, corresponding to an FI of 0.23 ± 0.12 (range: 0.00–0.56). Each 0.01-point increase in the FI was associated with an increased probability of leukoaraiosis (+2.3 %) and severe leukoaraiosis (+5 %), lacunas in the basal ganglia (+1.73 %), occipital lobes (+2.7 %), parietal lobes (+3 %), frontal lobes (+3.6 %), temporal lobes (+4.2 %), and thalamus (+4.4 %). Moreover, an increase of 0.01 points in the FI was associated with a 3.1 % increase in the probability of HVRS score (≥2). Conclusion: An FI based on routine clinical and laboratory variables was associated with the presence, degree, and some localizations of VBD in a population of older adults with cognitive decline. This frailty assessment tool may therefore be used to identify individuals at risk of developing cerebrovascular disease and, consequently, to implement strategies for vascular risk factor control

    Cannabidiol Discovery and Synthesis—a Target‐Oriented Analysis in Drug Production Processes

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