306 research outputs found

    Valproic acid is associated with cognitive decline in HIV-infected individuals: a clinical observational study

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    BACKGROUND: Valproic acid (VPA) is often used to control pain in HIV-related neuropathy. However, the effect of VPA on cognitive functions in advanced HIV-infected individuals is largely unknown. A recent study would suggest that it may have a neuroprotective effect, the doses used were low and the observation period short. METHODS: We used a well studied HIV-infected cohort assessed for a median of 15 (range 6ā€“27 months) to determine whether individuals who were receiving VPA showed any cognitive benefits. Multiple regression procedures allowed us to control for the effects of HAART and HIV disease status as well as numbers of visits and variation in VPA intake over-time. RESULTS: We found a negative effect of VPA (mean dose of 850 mg/d for 18 months on average; range 6ā€“27 months) on cognitive performance in eight advanced HIV-infected individuals compared to 32 advanced HIV-infected individuals on no VPA who had comparable neuropsychological performance at baseline. Control for plasma HIV viral load provided similar results. CONCLUSION: Our results suggest that further studies of VPA in advanced HIV-infection should cautiously include high doses over prolonged periods of at least 18 months in order to more accurately determine whether the posited neuroprotective benefit of VPA still occurs or whether it is replaced by toxicity

    Cognitive impairment and decline in cognitively normal older adults with high amyloid-Ī²: A meta-analysis

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    AbstractIntroductionThis meta-analysis aimed to characterize the nature and magnitude of amyloid (AĪ²)-related cognitive impairment and decline in cognitively normal (CN) older individuals.MethodMEDLINE Ovid was searched from 2012 to June 2016 for studies reporting relationships between cerebrospinal fluid or positron emission tomography (PET) AĪ² levels and cognitive impairment (cross-sectional) and decline (longitudinal) in CN older adults. Neuropsychological data were classified into domains of episodic memory, executive function, working memory, processing speed, visuospatial function, semantic memory, and global cognition. Type of AĪ² measure, how AĪ² burden was analyzed, inclusion of control variables, and clinical criteria used to exclude participants, were considered as moderators. Random-effects models were used for analyses with effect sizes expressed as Cohen's d.ResultsA total of 38 studies met inclusion criteria contributing 30 cross-sectional (NĀ =Ā 5005) and 14 longitudinal (NĀ =Ā 2584) samples. AĪ²-related cognitive impairment was observed for global cognition (dĀ =Ā 0.32), visuospatial function (dĀ =Ā 0.25), processing speed (dĀ =Ā 0.18), episodic memory, and executive function (both d'sĀ =Ā 0.15), with decline observed for global cognition (dĀ =Ā 0.30), semantic memory (dĀ =Ā 0.28), visuospatial function (dĀ =Ā 0.25), and episodic memory (dĀ =Ā 0.24). AĪ²-related impairment was moderated by age, amyloid measure, type of analysis, and inclusion of control variables and decline moderated by amyloid measure, type of analysis, inclusion of control variables, and exclusion criteria used.DiscussionCN older adults with high AĪ² show a small general cognitive impairment and small to moderate decline in episodic memory, visuospatial function, semantic memory, and global cognition

    Acceptability and usability of computerized cognitive assessment among Australian Indigenous residents of the Torres Strait Islands

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    Objectives: This cross-sectional study aimed to investigate the acceptability and usability of the Cogstate Brief Battery (CBB) in a community-based sample of Australian Indigenous people from the Torres Strait region, based on a user experience framework of human-computer interaction. Methods: Two-hundred community participants completed the four subtests of the CBB on an iPad platform, during a free adult health check on two islands in the region, between October and December 2016. Acceptability was defined as completing the learning trial of a task and usability as continuing a task through to completion, determined by examiner acumen and internal Cogstate completion and integrity criteria. These were combined into a single dichotomous completion measure for logistic regression analyses. Performance-measured as reaction times and accuracy of responses-was analyzed using linear regression analyses. Results: CBB completion ranged from 82.0% to 91.5% across the four tasks and the odds of completing decreased with age. After adjusting for age, iPad/tablet familiarity increased the odds of completion for all tasks while level of education and employment increased the odds for some tasks only. These variables accounted for 18.0%-23.8% of the variance in reaction times on speeded tasks. Age and education had the most effect, although semipartial correlations were modest. Conclusions: When administered in a health-screening context, the acceptability and usability of the CBB were greatest in young- to middle-aged participants with some education and iPad/tablet experience. Older and more vulnerable participants may have benefited from additional time and practice on the CBB prior to administration

    Using health check data to investigate cognitive function in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders living with diabetes in the Torres Strait, Australia

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    Background: Type 2 Diabetes (T2DM) has a subtle deleterious effect on cognition and imposes a higher lifetime risk of cognitive impairment and dementia. In populations where both T2DM and dementia are highly prevalent, understanding more about the early effects of T2DM on cognition may provide insights into the lifetime risks of this disease. Methods: In 2016, 186 Australian Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander residents of the Torres Strait (54% female, mean ageĀ =8.9Ā years, SDĀ =15.9, rangeĀ =15ā€“74) participated in a community health check. The effect of diabetes (Type 1 or Type 2) on speed of thinking and working memory was assessed with the Cogstate Brief Battery (CBB) during the health check. Results: One third of participants had diabetes (nĀ =Ā 56, 30.1%). After adjusting for age, education and previous iPad/Tablet experience, participants with diabetes had a small, yet significant reduction in accuracy on the One Back working memory task (Ī²Ā =Ā āˆ’.076, pĀ =.010, r2Ā =.042). The effect was most pronounced among participants with diabetes aged 20ā€“49Ā years (nĀ =Ā 20), who also had evidence of poorer diabetes control (eg HbA1c%Ā ā‰„6.5, 76.6%), relative to participants with diabetes aged 50Ā years and over (nĀ =Ā 31) (HbA1c%Ā ā‰„6.5, 32.0%, pĀ =.005). Conclusions: Early and subtle decrements in working memory may be a potential complication of diabetes among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander residents of the Torres Strait. Several potentially influential variables were not captured in this study (eg medication and diabetes duration). Greater preventative health resources are required for this population, particularly given the emerging elevated dementia rates linked to chronic disease

    Evaluation of the effect of Cooled HaEmodialysis on Cognitive function in patients suffering with end-stage KidnEy Disease (E-CHECKED): feasibility randomised control trial protocol

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    BACKGROUND: Cognitive impairment is common in haemodialysis (HD) patients and is associated independently with depression and mortality. This association is poorly understood, and no intervention is proven to slow cognitive decline. There is evidence that cooler dialysis fluid (dialysate) may slow white matter changes in the brain, but no study has investigated the effect of cooler dialysate on cognition. This study addresses whether cooler dialysate can prevent the decline in cognition and improve quality of life (QOL) in HD patients. METHODS: This is a multi-site prospective randomised, double-blinded feasibility trial. SETTING: Four HD units in the UK. PARTICIPANTS AND INTERVENTIONS: Ninety HD patients randomised (1:1) to standard care (dialysate temperature 36.5 Ā°C) or intervention (dialysate temperature 35ā€‰Ā°C) for 12ā€‰months. PRIMARY OUTCOME MEASURE: Change in cognition using the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA). SECONDARY OUTCOME MEASURES: Recruitment and attrition rates, reasons for non-recruitment, frequency of intradialytic hypotension, depressive symptom scores, patient and carers burden, a detailed computerised cognitive test and QOL assessments. ANALYSIS: mixed method approach, utilising measurement of cognition, questionnaires, physiological measurements and semi-structured interviews. DISCUSSION: The results of this feasibility trial will inform the design of a future adequately powered substantive trial investigating the effect of dialysate cooling on prevention and/or slowing in cognitive decline in patients undergoing haemodialysis using a computerised battery of neuro-cognitive tests. The main hypothesis that would be tested in this future trial is that patients treated with regular conventional haemodialysis will have a lesser decline in cognitive function and a better quality of life over 1 year by using cooler dialysis fluid at 35ā€‰Ā°C, versus a standard dialysis fluid temperature of 36.5ā€‰Ā°C. This also should reflect in improvements in their abilities for activities of daily living and therefore reduce carers' burden. If successful, the treatment could be universally applied at no extra cost. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03645733 . Registered retrospectively on 24 August 2018

    Learning deficit in cognitively normal apoe Īµ4 carriers with low Ī²-amyloid

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    Introduction: In cognitively normal (CN) adults, increased rates of amyloid beta (AĪ²) accumulation can be detected in low AĪ² (AĪ²ā€“) apolipoprotein E (APOE) Īµ4 carriers. We aimed to determine the effect of Īµ4 on the ability to benefit from experience (ie, learn) in AĪ²ā€“CNs. Methods: AĪ²ā€“ CNs(n= 333) underwent episodic memory assessments every 18 months for 108 months. A subset (n = 48) completed the Online Repeatable Cognitive Assessment-Language Learning Test (ORCA-LLT) over 6 days. Results: AĪ²ā€“ Īµ4 carriers showed significantly lower rates of improvement on episodic memory over 108 months compared to non-carriers (d = 0.3). Rates of learning on the ORCA-LLT were significantly slower in AĪ²ā€“ Īµ4 carriers compared to non-carriers (d = 1.2). Discussion: In AĪ²ā€“ CNs,Īµ4 is associated with a reduced ability to benefit from experience. This manifested as reduced practice effects (small to moderate in magnitude) over 108 months on the episodic memory composite, and a learning deficit (large in magnitude) over 6 days on the ORCA-LLT. Alzheimerā€™s disease (AD)ā€“related cognitive abnormalities can manifest before preclinical AD thresholds

    Development of complex executive function over childhood : Longitudinal growth curve modeling of performance on the Groton Maze Learning Task

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    Abstract This longitudinal study modeled children's complex executive function (EF) development using the Groton Maze Learning Task (GMLT). Using a cohort-sequential design, 147 children (61 males, 5.5ā€“11ā€‰years) were recruited from six multicultural primary schools in Melbourne and Perth, Australia. Race/ethnicity data were not available. Children were assessed on the GMLT at 6-month intervals over 2-years between 2010 and 2012. Growth curve models describe age-related change from 5.5 to 12.5ā€‰years old. Results showed a quadratic growth trajectory on each measure of errorā€”that is, those that reflect visuospatial memory, executive control (or the ability to apply rules for action), and complex EF. The ability to apply rules for action, while a rate-limiting factor in complex EF, develops rapidly over early-to-mid childhood

    Disruption of cholinergic neurotransmission, within a cognitive challenge paradigm, is indicative of AĪ²-related cognitive impairment in preclinical Alzheimerā€™s disease after a 27-month delay interval

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    Background Abnormal beta-amyloid (AĪ²) is associated with deleterious changes in central cholinergic tone in the very early stages of Alzheimerā€™s disease (AD), which may be unmasked by a cholinergic antagonist (J Prev Alzheimers Dis 1:1ā€“4, 2017). Previously, we established the scopolamine challenge test (SCT) as a ā€œcognitive stress testā€ screening measure to identify individuals at risk for AD (Alzheimerā€™s & Dementia 10(2):262ā€“7, 2014) (Neurobiol. Aging 36(10):2709-15, 2015). Here we aim to demonstrate the potential of the SCT as an indicator of cognitive change and neocortical amyloid aggregation after a 27-month follow-up interval. Methods Older adults (Nā€‰=ā€‰63, aged 55ā€“75ā€‰years) with self-reported memory difficulties and first-degree family history of AD completed the SCT and PET amyloid imaging at baseline and were then seen for cognitive testing at 9, 18, and 27 months post-baseline. Repeat PET amyloid imaging was completed at the time of the 27-month exam. Results Significant differences in both cognitive performance and in AĪ² neocortical burden were observed between participants who either failed vs. passed the SCT at baseline, after a 27-month follow-up period. Conclusions Cognitive response to the SCT (Alzheimerā€™s & Dementia 10(2):262ā€“7, 2014) at baseline is related to cognitive change and PET amyloid imaging results, over the course of 27ā€‰months, in preclinical AD. The SCT may be a clinically useful screening tool to identify individuals who are more likely to both have positive evidence of amyloidosis on PET imaging and to show measurable cognitive decline over several years
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