Impaired kidney function linked to more rapid rate of decline in cognition in elderly
A new study published in the medical journal Neurology
suggests that impaired kidney function is a risk factor for cognitive decline
in old age.
The study, conducted by researchers at Rush University
Medical Center, found that poor kidney function was linked specifically with cognition
related to memory functions. Damage to one of these functions, episodic memory,
which retrieves memories of time, place, associated emotions and other contextual
knowledge, is often the earliest sign of Alzheimer's disease.
"Given the dearth of modifiable risk factors for
age-related cognitive decline, these results have important public health implications,"
said Dr. Aron Buchman, a neuroscientist in the Rush Alzheimer's Disease Center.
"Further work to understand the link between kidney function and the brain
may provide new strategies for preventing memory loss in elders."
Buchman said the findings suggest that there are common
disease processes that affect both the brain and the kidneys in the elderly, and
hypothesized that underlying vascular problems, such as diabetes and hypertension,
may account for the association between kidney problems and cognitive decline.
The study analyzed data for 886 older adults who participated
in the Rush Memory and Aging Project, a group of community-dwelling seniors with
a mean age of 81, all of them initially free of dementia. The participants were
examined annually for up to six years to track changes in cognition over time.
Cognitive assessments included multiple tests that were summarized as a composite
measure of overall cognition and of five individual cognitive abilities.
The individual cognitive systems assessed were visuospatial
ability; perceptual speed, or the ability to quickly and accurately compare letters,
numbers, objects, pictures or patterns; semantic memory, related to meaning, understanding
and other concept-based knowledge; working memory, which temporarily stores and
manipulates information; and episodic memory.
Ruling out the influence of factors like aging and medications,
which can affect cognition, the researchers found that poor kidney function, assessed
at the beginning of the study, was linked with a more rapid rate of decline in
cognition over the next several years - not in visuospatial ability or perceptual
speed, but in three specific areas: episodic, semantic and working memory.
The rate of decline in cognition was equivalent to that
of a person seven years older at baseline, Buchman said.
The study was supported by funds from the National Institute
on Aging, the Illinois Department of Public Health and the Robert C. Borwell Endowment
Fund.
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