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Association of obesity, diabetes and hypertension with cognitive impairment in older age

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Item Type:Article
Title:Association of obesity, diabetes and hypertension with cognitive impairment in older age
Creators Name:Feinkohl, I. and Lachmann, G. and Brockhaus, W.R. and Borchers, F. and Piper, S.K. and Ottens, T. and Nathoe, H. and Sauer, A.M. and Dieleman, J. and Radtke, F. and van Dijk, D. and Pischon, T. and Spies, C.
Abstract:BACKGROUND: Age-related cognitive impairment is rising in prevalence but is not yet fully characterized in terms of its epidemiology. Here, we aimed to elucidate the role of obesity, diabetes and hypertension as candidate risk factors. METHODS: Original baseline data from 3 studies (OCTOPUS, DECS, SuDoCo) were obtained for secondary analysis of cross-sectional associations of diabetes, hypertension, blood pressure, obesity (body mass index [BMI] ≥30 kg/m²) and BMI with presence of cognitive impairment in log-binomial regression analyses. Cognitive impairment was defined as scoring more than 2 standard deviations below controls on at least one of 5–11 cognitive tests. Underweight participants (BMI<18.5 kg/m2) were excluded. Results were pooled across studies in fixed-effects inverse variance models. RESULTS: Analyses totaled 1545 participants with a mean age of 61 years (OCTOPUS) to 70 years (SuDoCo). Cognitive impairment was found in 29.0% of participants in DECS, 8.2% in SuDoCo and 45.6% in OCTOPUS. In pooled analyses, after adjustment for age, sex, diabetes and hypertension, obesity was associated with a 1.29-fold increased prevalence of cognitive impairment (risk ratio [RR] 1.29; 95% CI 0.98, 1.72). Each 1 kg/m² increment in BMI was associated with 3% increased prevalence (RR 1.03; 95% CI 1.00, 1.06). None of the remaining risk factors were associated with impairment. CONCLUSION: Our results show that older people who are obese have higher prevalence of cognitive impairment compared with normal weight and overweight individuals, and independently of co-morbid hypertension or diabetes. Prospective studies are needed to investigate the temporal relationship of the association.
Keywords:Obesity, Body Mass Index, Diabetes, Hypertension, Cognitive Impairment, Aging, Cognitive Epidemiology
Source:Clinical Epidemiology
ISSN:1179-1349
Publisher:Dove Medical Press
Volume:10
Page Range:853-862
Date:25 July 2018
Official Publication:https://doi.org/10.2147/CLEP.S164793
PubMed:View item in PubMed

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