| Literature DB >> 21584241 |
Linda L Buettner1, Suzanne Fitzsimmons, Serdar Atav, Kaycee Sink.
Abstract
We studied changes in apathy among 77 community-dwelling older persons with mild memory loss in a randomized clinical trial comparing two nonpharmacological interventions over four weeks. The study used a pre-post design with randomization by site to avoid contamination and diffusion of effect. Interventions were offered twice weekly after baseline evaluations were completed. The treatment group received classroom style mentally stimulating activities (MSAs) while the control group received a structured early-stage social support (SS) group. The results showed that the MSA group had significantly lower levels of apathy (P < .001) and significantly lower symptoms of depression (P < .001). While both groups improved on quality of life, the MSA group was significantly better (P = .02) than the SS group. Executive function was not significantly different for the two groups at four weeks, but general cognition improved for the MSA group and declined slightly for the SS group which produced a significant posttest difference (P < .001). Recruitment and retention of SS group members was difficult in this project, especially in senior center locations, while this was not the case for the MSA group. The examination of the data at this four-week time point shows promising results that the MSA intervention may provide a much needed method of reducing apathy and depressive symptoms, while motivating participation and increasing quality of life.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21584241 PMCID: PMC3092580 DOI: 10.4061/2011/480890
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Aging Res ISSN: 2090-2204
Figure 1Theoretical model for apathy and the MSA intervention.
Analyses of covariance summary table for the effect of treatment.
| Adjusted means at baseline | Adjusted means at 4 weeks | Significance ( | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apathy | SS | 30.38 | 35.52 | 29 | 31.496 | <.001 |
| MSA | 32.08 | 28.19 | 48 | |||
| Cornell Brown QOL | SS | 18.62 | 20.52 | 29 | 4.978 | .029 |
| MSA | 14.31 | 22.92 | 48 | |||
| MMSE | SS | 25.41 | 24.79 | 29 | 22.429 | <.001 |
| MSA | 25.17 | 26.10 | 48 | |||
| PHQ-9 | SS | 4.66 | 6.48 | 29 | 13.319 | <.001 |
| MSA | 5.94 | 4.55 | 48 | |||
| Trail making | SS | 192.20 | 178.89 | 29 | .022 | .258 (n.s) |
| MSA | 184.73 | 161.42 | 48 |
Variables and measurement.
| Cognition and Eligibility for study | Mini-Mental State examination (MMSE) [ | The MMSE consists of 11 simple questions or tasks. Test-retest reliability ( |
| Neuropsychiatric behaviors | Clinician administered Apathy Evaluation Scale (AES) [ | The AES is an 18-item scale. Internal consistency has an alpha range of 0.86–0.94.Validity: differences found |
| Quality of life | Cornell-Brown QOL [ | Interrater reliability (intraclass |
| Depression | The Patient Health Questionnaire [ | Nine-item scale with PHQ-9 score ≥10 had a sensitivity of 88% and a specificity of 88% for major depression. |
| Executive function | Trail Making B [ | Validity is high, especially when measuring attention and executive function |
Participant demographics (values are presented as n (%) or mean (standard deviation)).
| Total | Control (social support) | Treatment (mentally stimulating activities) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 77 | 29* | 48 | ||
| Gender | .243 | |||
| Male | 15 (19.5%) | 4 (13.8%) | 11 (22.9%) | |
| Female | 62 (80.5%) | 25 (86.2%) | 36 (77.1%) | |
| .071 | ||||
| Caucasian | 56 (72.7%) | 17 (58.6%) | 39 (81.3%) | |
| African-American | 20 (25.9%) | 11 (37.9%) | 9 (18.7%) | |
| Hispanic | 1 (1.3%) | 1 (.03%) | 0 (0%) | |
| .594 | ||||
| Yes | 20 | 7 (24.1%) | 13 (27.1%) | |
| No | 57 | 22 (75.9%) | 35 (72.9%) | |
| 82.2 (6.5) | 81.0 (8.7) | .07 | ||
| 13.6 (3.8) | 14.6 (3.6) | .499 | ||
| MMSE | 25.4 (2.8) | 25.2 (3.3) | .269 | |
| AES (Apathy) | 30.4 (7.9) | 32.8 (8.7) | .331 | |
| Cornell-Brown | 18.6 (11.3) | 14.3 (10.8) | .758 | |
| PHQ-9 | 4.7 (4.8) | 5.9 (5.7) | .188 | |
| Trail Making Time | 192.80 (89.7) | 178.45 (90.0) | .635 |
*48 participants were enrolled but 19 dropped after baseline recruitment and evaluation due to health problems and lack of interest in the intervention (39%). These participants were not included in the pre-post analysis.