People with declines in mental abilities
may be at increased risk for stroke
People who have memory problems or other declines in
their mental abilities may be at higher risk for stroke, according to a study
that will be presented at the American Academy of Neurology's 63rd Annual Meeting
in Honolulu April 9 to April 16, 2011.
"Finding ways to prevent stroke and identify people at risk for stroke
are important public health problems," said study author Abraham J. Letter
of the University of Alabama at Birmingham. "This study shows we might get
a better idea of who is at high risk of stroke by including a couple simple tests
when we are evaluating people who already have some stroke risk."
For the study, researchers gave tests to people age 45 and older who had never
had a stroke, then contacted them twice a year by phone for up to 4.5 years to
determine whether they had suffered a stroke. The average age of the participants
was 67. Strokes were then confirmed by medical records. A total of 14,842 people
took a verbal fluency test, measuring the brain's executive functioning skills,
and 17,851 people took a word recall memory test.
The study was part of a larger study called the REasons for Geographic and
Racial Differences in Stroke (REGARDS) study. During the study, 123 participants
who had taken the verbal fluency test and 129 participants who had taken the memory
test experienced a stroke.
Those who scored in the bottom 20 percent for verbal fluency were 3.6 times
more likely to develop a stroke than those who scored in the top 20 percent. For
the memory test, those who scored in the bottom 20 percent were 3.5 times more
likely to have a stroke than those in the top 20 percent. The difference in stroke
incidence rates between those with the bottom and top 20 percent of scores was
3.3 strokes per thousand person-years. In general, the differences remained after
researchers adjusted for age, education, race and where participants lived.
At age 50, those who scored in the bottom 20 percent of the memory test were
9.4 times more likely to later have a stroke than those in the top 20 percent,
but the difference was not as large at older ages.
The study was supported by the National Institutes of Health and the National
Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke.
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