Cardiovascular diseases, risk factors and cognitive decline in the general population

Abstract

Cognitive function constitutes a critical dimension of the health status of elderly individuals. Age-associated decline in cognitive function may partly be attributed to the negative effects of systemic medical diseases and related factors, including cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) and vascular risk factors. Cognitive decline has been an understudied outcome in cardiovascular epidemiological research. Few reports have comprehensively examined cognitive function in relation to clinical manifestations of systemic atherosclerotic disease in different arterial beds. Inconsistent findings are common in the literature and these arc likely to reflect the vast differences between studies regarding the choice of population under study, the methods applied for measuring and defining CVD, the types and timing of administration of protocols used for assessing cognitive function, and the paths taken in the analysis of data.The principal aim of the present study was to examine the longitudinal change in cognitive test performance in relation to major clinical CVDs and vascular risk factors in a population-based sample of older people. The administration of a battery of neuropsychological tests on two separate occasions facilitated the study of actual change in both general cognition and across different cognitive abilities according to an objectively-determined CVD status. A valid estimation of peak prior cognitive ability allowed the exploration of the impact of CVD and risk factors on the imputed decline from best-ever level of cognitive function to that measured in old age.The analysis is based on a cohort of 809 men and 783 women aged 55-74 years which in 1987/8 was randomly selected from the general population of Edinburgh. A comprehensive assessment of the prevalence of major CVDs and vascular risk factors was held at baseline and during two follow-up examinations. Since baseline, the study sample has been followed up to determine the incidence of angina pectoris, peripheral arterial disease (PAD), myocardial infarction (MI), and stroke. Cognitive testing was first held in 1998/9 when the mean age of the surviving cohort (n=1209) was 73.1 years (SD=5.0) and subsequently about four years later using the same test protocol. The present investigation is based on the 452 study participants who attended follow-up cognitive testing in 2002/3.Both general cognition, as indexed by a general cognitive factor representing the variance common to all the cognitive tests used, and most individual cognitive measures were negatively affected in participants with CVD but no evidence of stroke relative to non-vascular controls. Of the specific CVD manifestations, stroke was significantly associated with a steeper four-year decline in both general cognitive function and verbal memory. When decline was estimated from peak, prior cognitive level, stroke was related to a greater decline in both general cognition and verbal fluency. In the absence of stroke, MI was associated with an accelerated fouryear decline in non-verbal reasoning ability but the presence of angina was not related to cognitive decline in this study. Symptomatic PAD also independently predicted faster decline in both general cognition and verbal memory over the fouryear follow-up. Several potentially modifiable vascular risk factors, including education, body mass index, smoking, diastolic blood pressure, inflammatory markers and blood viscosity were also related to decline in general and specific cognitive abilities, independently of age, sex, prior cognitive ability and vascular disease. The associations with decline in specific cognitive measures principally resulted from the impact of atherosclerotic disease and risk factors on general cognitive ability rather than the individual functions per se.The findings from the present study further add to those of previous investigations demonstrating a relationship between CVDs, vascular risk factors, and cognitive decline in older people. Specifically, they reveal that, even in the absence of overt stroke, clinical CVDs are associated with a greater cognitive decline in the elderly, independently of potential confounding by a wide range of vascular risk factors. Also, the relationships between several vascular risk factors and cognitive decline proved to be independent of overt co-existing vascular pathology. Based on these findings, further study is needed to determine the combined effects of CVDs and multiple risk factors on cognitive outcomes in samples of older people. In addition, what the likely pathological mechanisms are underlying cognitive decline associated with atherosclerotic disease and vascular risk factors needs to be addressed in future studies. From a perspective of preventing or delaying vascular based cognitive decline and impairment, more research is required to assess the effectiveness of both individual and population-based strategies targeting vascular disease and risk factors in older age groups. Finally, further investigation is needed to address the potential impact of subtle cognitive deficits on indicators of the quality of life and the capability of self-maintenance of elderly vascular patients, on adherence to medical treatment and rehabilitation, and further cognitive decrements and survival

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