| Literature DB >> 22675535 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cognitive reserve (CR) or brain reserve capacity explains why individuals with higher IQ, education, or occupational attainment have lower risks of developing dementia, Alzheimer's disease (AD) or vascular dementia (VaD). The CR hypothesis postulates that CR reduces the prevalence and incidence of AD or VaD. It also hypothesizes that among those who have greater initial cognitive reserve (in contrast to those with less reserve) greater brain pathology occurs before the clinical symptoms of disease becomes manifest. Thus clinical disease onset triggers a faster decline in cognition and function, and increased mortality among those with initial greater cognitive reserve. Disease progression follows distinctly separate pathological and clinical paths. With education as a proxy we use meta-analyses and qualitative analyses to review the evidence for the CR hypothesis. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22675535 PMCID: PMC3366926 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0038268
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Flow chart of review process.
Education and the risk of dementia: Characteristics of studies included in the meta-analysis.
| Study | Country | Education | Sample Size | Study Design | Crude OR (95%CI) AD | VaD | Dementia |
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| Zhang et al. [a1] 1990 | China | ≤6 yrs, >6 yrs | 5,055 | Cross-sectional | 9.51 (4.16–21.73) | 5.09 (3.03–8.56) | |
| Fratiglioni et al. [a2] 1991 | Sweden | Elementary, High school | 1,810 | Cross-sectional | 1.81 (1.21–2.71) | 1.77 (0.98–3.19) | 2.08 (1.52–2.83) |
| Canadian Study of Health and Aging [a3] 1994 | Canada | ≤9 yrs, >9 yrs | 793 | Cross-sectional (base-line) | 2.42 (1.74–3.35) | ||
| Kondo et al. [a4] 1994 | Japan | ≤Elementary, >Secondary | 180 | Case-control | 1.67 (0.88–3.15) | ||
| Graves et al. [a5] 1994 | USA | ≤8 yrs, >9 yrs | 1,941 | Cross-sectional | 64.20 (31.75–129.80) | 95.81 (55.33–165.91) | |
| Lobo et al. [a6] 1995 | USA | Primary, Higher | 1,080 | Case-control | 1.12 (0.42–3.01) | 1.88 (0.80–4.44) | |
| Liu et al. [a7] 1995 | Taiwan | ≤1 yrs, >1 yrs | 5,297 | Cross-sectional | 6.25(0.83–47.01) | ||
| Mortel et al. [a8] 1995 | USA | ≤High school, >High school | 338 | Case-control | 1.14 (0.74–1.75) | 0.62 (0.38–1.00) | |
| Ott et al. [a9] 1995 | Rotterdam Netherlands | ≤Low vocational training, >Middle level | 7,528 | Cross-sectional | 2.94 (2.32–3.73) | 1.44 (0.88–2.38) | 1.35 (1.12–1.62) |
| Callahan et al. [a10] 1996 | USA | ≤5 yrs, >6 yrs | 2,212 | Case-control | 3.17 (1.58–6.36) | 0.42 (0.24–0.75) | |
| Prencipe et al. [a11]1996 | Italy | <3 yrs, ≥3 yrs | 1,147 | Cross-sectional | 2.54 (1.42–4.53) | 2.85 (1.20–6.80) | 2.74 (1.71–4.39) |
| Tsolaki et al. [a12]] 1997 | Greece | ≤6 yrs, >6 yrs | 134 | Case-control | 0.62 (0.25–1.51) | ||
| Liu et al. [a13] 1998 | Taiwan | Illiterate, Literate | 1,736 | Cross-sectional | 2.97 (1.04–8.46) | 3.86 (1.37–10.85) | |
| Lin et al.[a14] 1998 | Taiwan | Illiterate, Literate | 2,915 | Cross-sectional | 9.02 (3.26–24.96) | 2.07 (0.82–5.20) | 2.78 (1.72–4.50) |
| De Ronchi et al. [a15] 1998 | Italy | Illiterate, Literate | 495 | Cross-sectional | 5.11 (2.36–11.04) | ||
| Hall et al. [a16] 1998 | Nigeria | ≤6 yrs, >6 yrs | 256 | Cross-sectional | 0.59 (0.07–5.11) | ||
| * Hall et al. [a16] 1998 | USA | ≤6 yrs, >6 yrs | 217 | Cross-sectional | 2.18 (1.02–4.69) | ||
| Harwood et al. [a17]1999 | USA | ≤10 yrs, >10 yrs | 866 | Case-control | 0.65 (0.45–0.95) | ||
| Hall et al. [a18] 2000 | USA | ≤6 yrs, >6 yrs | 223 | Case-control | 1.80 (0.85–3.79) | ||
| Bowirrat et al. [a19] 2001 | Arab | Illiterate, Literate | 821 | Cross-sectional | 9.10 (4.56–18.16) | ||
| Gatz et al. [a20] 2001 | Sweden | ≤Elementary, >Elementary | 663 | Case-control | 2.22 (1.04–4.90) | ||
| Bowirrat et al. [a21] 2002 | Israel | Illiterate, Literate | 605 | Case-control | 28.65 (13.79–59.53) | 6.32 (2.98–13.42) | |
| Ravaglia et al. [a22] 2002 | Italy | ≤3 yrs, >3 yrs | 1,016 | Cross-sectional | 6.39 (2.71–15.03) | 6.77 (2.71–16.94) | 6.78 (3.67–12.52) |
| Lindsay et al. [a23] 2002 | Canada | ≤8 yrs, >9 yrs | 4,088 | Case-control | 1.73 (1.28–2.34) | ||
| Mortimer et al. [a24] 2003 | USA | ≤16 yrs, >16 yrs | 294 | Cross-sectional | 2.10 (1.05–4.21) | ||
| Harmanci et al. [a25] 2003 | Turkey | ≤Primary, >Primary | 124 | Case-control | 2.16 (1.13–4.15) | ||
| Seidler et al. [a26] 2003 | Germany | ≤Elementary, >Secondary | 424 | Case-control | 2.09 (1.24–3.51) | 2.37 (1.18–4.76) | 2.21 (1.43–3.42) |
| Yu et al. [a27] 2004 | China | Illiterate, Literate | 2,674 | Cross-sectional | 1.08 (0.43–2.70) | 0.76 (0.18–3.14) | |
| Gatz et al. [a28] 2006 | Sweden | Compulsory, Higher | 3,373 | Case-control | 0.96 (0.72–1.28) | 2.39 (1.80–3.19) | |
| Zhang et al. [a29] 2006 | China | ≤6yrs, >7yrs | 34,807 | Cross-sectional | 2.77 (2.22–3.46) | 1.59 (1.19–2.12) | |
| Zhou et al. [a30] 2006 | China | ≤Primary, >Primary | 16,095 | Cross-sectional | 3.05 (2.30–4.03) | ||
| Park et al. [a31] 2008 | Korea | ≤Low, >Low | 2,187 | Cross-sectional | 1.93 (1.59–2.33) | ||
| Sahadevan et al. [a32] 2008 | Singapore | ≤Primary, >Primary | 14,743 | Cross-sectional | 6.20 (3.14–12.27) | 3.76 (1.94–7.31) | 4.93 (3.10–7.83) |
| Fischer et al. [a33] 2008 | Austria | ≤Low, >Low | 471 | Cohort | 0.62 (0.37–1.02) | ||
| Grunblatt et al. [a34] 2009 | Germany | ≤Secondary, >Secondary | 606 | Case-control | 2.05 (1.34–3.12) | ||
| Gavrila et al. [a35] 2009 | Spain | ≤Illiteracy, >Literacy | 782 | Cross-sectional | 2.10 (0.93–4.77) | 2.48 (1.38–4.45) | |
| Israeli-Korn [a36] 2010 | Israel | ≤Illiteracy, >Literacy | 665 | Cross-sectional | 4.73 (2.97–7.52) | ||
| Mathuranath [a37] 2010 | India | ≤4 yrs, >4 yrs | Cross-sectional | 1.98 (1.41–2.78) | |||
| Liu et al. [a38] 1994 | Taiwan | ≤1 yrs, >1 yrs | 455 | Cross-sectional | 2.88 (0.64–12.83) | ||
| Schmand et al. [a39] 1997 | Netherlands | ≤Primary, >Primary | 4,501 | Cross-sectional | 2.93 (2.14–4.01) | ||
| Herrera et al. [a40] 2002 | Brazil | Illiterate, Literate | 1,656 | Cross-sectional | 2.94 (2.01–4.31) | ||
| Zou et al. [a41] 2003 | China | Illiterate, Literate | 1,219 | Cross-sectional | 1.74 (1.12–2.71) | ||
| Kahana et al. [a42] 2003 | Israel | ≤8 yrs, >8 yrs | 1,501 | Cross-sectional | 2.47 (1.65–3.69) | ||
| Ampuero et al. [a43] 2008 | Spain | ≤Illiterate, >Literate | 359 | Case-control | 2.20 (1.23–3.95) | ||
| Llibre Rodríguez et al. [a44] 2008 | Cuba | ≤Primary, >Primary | 2,936 | Cross-sectional | 2.01 (1.44–2.80) | ||
| Yamada et al. [a45]2009 | Japan | ≤7 yrs, >7 yrs | 2,105 | Cross-sectional | 2.48 (1.68–3.66) | ||
| Bickel et al. [a46] 2009 | Germany | ≤8 yrs, >8 yrs | 442 | Cross-sectional | 4.02 (2.53–6.38) | ||
| Arslantas et al. [a47] 2009 | Turkey | ≤Illiterate, >Literate | 262 | Cross-sectional | 3.67 (1.47–9.19) | ||
| Nunes et al. [a48] 2010 | Portugal | ≤Illiterate, >Literate | 1,146 | Cross-sectional | 1.75 (0.80–3.86) | ||
| Saldanha et al. [a49] 2010 | India | ≤9 yrs, >9 yrs | 2,071 | Cross-sectional | 2.76 (1.00–7.61) | ||
| Yaffe et al. [a50] 2011 | USA | ≤9 yrs, >9 yrs | 998 | Case-control | 1.99 (1.34–2.97) | ||
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| Beard et al. [a51] 1992 | USA | ≤9 yrs, >9 yrs | 298 | Case-control | 0.89 (0.55–1.44) | ||
| Stern et al. [a52] 1994 | USA | ≤8 yrs, >9 yrs | 593 | Cohort | 2.32 (1.51–3.58) | ||
| Cobb et al. [a53] 1995 | USA | ><High, ≥High | 3,330 | Cohort | 1.36 (0.98–1.89) | ||
| Evans et al. [a54] 1997 | USA | ≤8 yrs, >9 yrs | 642 | Cohort | 3.28 (2.00–5.37) | ||
| Zhang et al. [a55] 1998 | China | Illiterate, Literate | 1,970 | Cohort | 2.29 (1.57–3.36) | ||
| Geerlings et al. [a56] 1999 | Netherlands | Low, High | 3,778 | Cohort | 2.80 (1.75–4.46) | ||
| Launer et al. [a57] 1999 | Europe | ≤8 yrs, >9 yrs | 13,205 | Cohort | 1.40 (1.12–1.74) | ||
| Letenneur et al. [a58] 2000 | Europe | ≤7 yrs, >7 yrs | 12,945 | Cohort | 1.74 (1.40–2.17) | ||
| He et al. [a59] 2000 | China | Illiterate, Literate | 2,975 | Cohort | 3.28 (2.23–5.14) | ||
| * He et al. [a59] 2000 | China | Illiterate, Literate | 1,160 | Cohort | 3.20 (1.99–5.13) | ||
| Kawas et al. [a60] 2000 | USA | ≤12 yrs, >12 yrs | 1,236 | Cohort | 0.71 (0.34–1.48) | ||
| * Gatz et al. [a20] 2001 | Sweden | ≤6 yrs, >6 yrs | 231 | Case-control | 2.17 (0.69–6.86) | ||
| Qiu et al. [a61] 2001 | Sweden | ≤8 yrs, >9 yrs | 1,296 | Cohort | 3.21 (1.97–5.24) | ||
| Karp et al. [a62] 2004 | Sweden | ≤7 yrs, >7 yrs | 931 | Cohort | 0.29 (0.16–0.52) | ||
| Yip et al. [a63] 2006 | UK | ≤9 yrs, >9 yrs | 4,075 | Case-control | 1.26(0.96–1.64) | ||
| McDowell et al. [a64] 2007 | Canada | ≤8 yrs, >9 yrs | 6,646 | Cohort | 3.83 (3.16–4.63) | 2.95 (2.14–4.07) | |
| Lindsay et al. [a65] 1997 | Canada | ≤9 yrs, >9 yrs | 659 | Nested Case-control | 2.44 (1.60–3.72) | ||
| Yang et al. [a66] 2007 | China | ≤6 yrs, >6 yrs | 403 | Cohort | 2.75 (1.69–4.50) | ||
| * Schmand et al. [a39] 1997 | Netherlands | ≤Primary, >Primary | 2,176 | Cohort | 1.86 (1.32–2.63) | ||
| Solfrizzi et al. [a67] 2004 | Italy | ≤3 yrs, >3 yrs | 1,524 | Cohort | 1.31 (0.38–4.55) | ||
| Ngandu et al. [a68] 2007 | USA | ≤6 yrs, >6 yrs | 591 | Cohort | 1.77 (0.91–3.41) | ||
| Rusanen et al. [a69] 2011 | Finland | ≤9 yrs, >9 yrs | 20,938 | Cohort | 1.29 (1.17–1.43) | ||
Figure 2Summary of findings from observational studies of education and prevalence of dementia (* denotes studies with two or more empirical findings).
Figure 3Summary of findings from observational studies of education and the incidence of dementia (* denotes studies with two or more empirical findings).
Figure 4Funnel plot prevalent studies of dementia and education with a variety of study designs.
Figure 5Funnel plot of incidence studies of dementia and education.
Qualitative analysis: Studies linking education to various aspects of dementia (* denotes studies with findings related to two or more areas of inquiry).
| Study | Country | Study Design | Sample Size | Results |
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| Letenneur et al. [a70] 1999 | France | Cohort | 2,881age 65+ | Subjects with a lower educational level were at higher risk of developing AD. |
| Yamada et al. [a71] 1999 | Japan | Cohort | 2,222 age 60+ | More education can protect against AD and VaD. |
| Tyas et al. [a72] 2001 | Canada | Cohort | 694 age 65+ | Lower education was significantly related to occurrence of AD. |
| Anttila et al. [a73] 2002 | Finland | Population Cohort | 1,449 | Low education and the APOE ε4 allele independently increased the risk for dementia. |
| Di Carlo et al. [a74] 2002 | Italy | Cohort | 2,266 age 65+ | A higher level of education was protective against dementia and AD. |
| Miech et al. [a75] 2002 | USA | Cohort | 4,092 age 65+ | Education had no association with the incidence of AD. |
| Wilson et al. [a76] 2002 | USA | Cohort | 835 age 65+ | Education was inversely associated with risk of AD, but the effect was substantially reduced when cognitive activity was added to the model. |
| Yamada et al. [a77] 2003 | Japan | Cross-sectional | 1,774 | AD prevalence increased significantly with lower education. |
| Ravaglia et al. [a78] 2005 | Italy | Cohort | 937 age 65+ | A higher level of education was protective against the risk of dementia and AD but not for VaD. |
| Tognoni et al. [a79] 2005 | Italy | Cross-sectional | 1,600 age 65+ | Higher education can protect against AD, not VaD. |
| Lin et al. [a80] 2006 | Taiwan | Case-control | 245 | There was no relation between education and VaD. |
| Shadlen et al. [a81] 2006 | USA | Cohort | 2,786 | Low level education was risk factor of incident AD, and black people have more risk than white people. |
| van Oijen et al. [a82] 2007 | Netherlands | Cohort | 6,927 age 55+ | Both men and women with higher education had a lower risk of AD although the association seemed strongest in men. |
| Galasko et al. [a83] 2007 | Guam | Cross-sectional | 2,770 age 65+ | Decreasing education was significantly associated with an increased prevalence dementia overall. |
| Lee et al. [a84] 2008 | Korea | Cohort | 966 age 65+ | Illiteracy was associated with a higher risk of AD and the risk increases with age. |
| Yamada et al. [a85] 2008 | Japan | Cohort | 2,286 age 60+ | Probable AD decreased with increasing education level. Probable VaD showed no significant effects of education. |
| Hebert et al. [a86] 2010 | USA | Cohort | 1,695 age 65+ | Incidence of AD did not change over a 3-year period and the relationship between education and AD also did not change. Education was not statistically significantly associated with AD though the odd ratio trended towards a protective effect for higher education. |
| EClipSE Collaborative Members [a87] 2010 | Europe | Cohort | 872 | Longer years in education were associated with decreased dementia risk. |
| Rastas et al. [a88] 2010 | Finland | Cohort | 339 age 85+ | Higher level of education were associated with a lower probability of dementia. |
| Kim et al. [a89] 2011 | Korea | Cross-sectional | 1,673 age 65+ | Lower education level was associated with a higher risk of the onset of dementia. |
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| *Tuokko et al. [a98] 2003 | Canada | Cohort with nested case-control sub-study (CSHA) | 844 aged 65+ | Subjects were classified as high (HF) and low (LF) functioning in three ways: education, occupation, and estimated premorbid IQ. Fewer HF adults were diagnosed as incident dementia after 5 years. |
| *Tervo et al. [a100] 2004 | Finland | Cohort | 806 age 60+ | Over a 3-yr study period those with high education were less likely to convert to mild cognitive impairment (MCI), a potential precursor of AD, than those with low or no education. |
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| Filley et al. [a90] 1985 | USA | Case-control | 28 | Higher education did not delay the onset of AD or Senile Dementia of the Alzhiemer’s Type (SDAT) nor did it retard the rate of intellectual deterioration or functional decline. |
| Teri et al. [a91] 1995 | USA | Cohort | 156, age 65+ | Higher education was significantly related to increasing rates of cognitive decline. |
| Small et al. [a92] 1997 | Sweden | Cohort | 36 | There was no relation between education and cognitive decline. |
| Aguero-Torres et al. [a93] 1998 | Sweden | Cohort | 243 age 75+ | Education did not affect rates of cognitive decline. |
| Weiner et al. [a94] 1998 | USA | Cohort | 594 | Persons with completed high school education in contrast to those who had not completed high school had a more rapid decline on cognitive function, language and praxis scales but no greater loss in global function. |
| Stern et al. [a95] 1999 | USA | Cohort | 177 | There was a more rapid decline in memory scores in AD patients with high educational and higher occupational attainment especially among those with low initial scores. |
| Wilson et al. [a96] 2000 | USA | Cohort | 410 | Higher educational attainment was associated with higher baseline cognitive function and more rapid decline. |
| *Bowirrat et al. [a21] 2002 | Israel | Case-control | 285age 60+ (Arab population) | Illiteracy was significantly more common among those who developed AD than among those who remained with Age Associated Cognitive Decline (ARCD). |
| Frittsch et al. [a97] 2002 | USA | Cohort | 482 | Higher education slowed the rate of cognitive decline in persons with AD. |
| Tuokko et al. [a98] 2003 | Canada | Cohort with nested case-control sub-study (CSHA) | 844 aged 65+ | Subjects were classified as high (HF) and low (LF) functioning in three ways: education, occupation, and estimated premorbid IQ. Those HFs diagnosed with dementia showed more rapid decline on 5 of 6 measures memory measure; they also had lower baseline scores than those HFs who did not become demented. |
| Suh et al. [a99] 2004 | South Korea | Cohort | 107 community based AD patients | Neither gender, duration of education, nor duration of AD since onset were significant predictors of cognitive and functional decline. |
| Tervo et al. [a100] 2004 | Finland | Cohort | 806 age 60+ | Over a 3-yr study period those with high education were less likely to convert to mild cognitive impairment (MCI), a potential precursor of AD, than those with low or no education. |
| Wilson et al. [a101] 2004 | USA (Chicago) | Cohort | 494AD patients | Higher education level was related to more rapid global cognitive decline with education related to the non-linear but not the linear component of the decline. Age was related to linear decline, with more rapid decline observed in younger persons. |
| Le Carret et al. [a102] 2004 | France | Case-Control | 20 Cases, 20 Controls | Higher educated (HE) patients exhibited greater impairment of abstract thinking whereas low-educated patients showed greater impairment of memory and attention. Some cognitive processes such as abstract thinking may decline more rapidly in HE but they may still benefit from cognitive reserve even after a dementia diagnosis. |
| Andel et al. [a103] 2006 | USA | Cohort | 171 AD patients | High education, high substantive complexity, and high complexity of work with data and people predicted faster rates of cognitive decline controlling other attributes. Cognitive reserve may postpone the clinical onset of AD but accelerate cognitive decline after the onset. |
| Hall et al. [a104] 2007 | USA | Cohort | 117 age 75∼85 | Higher education delayed the onset of accelerated cognitive decline; once it started it was more rapid in persons with more education. |
| Bruandet et al. [a105] 2008 | France | Cohort | 670 | Highly educated patients had a faster cognitive decline than less educated patients. |
| Helzner et al. [a106] 2009 | USA | Cohort | 156 mean age 83 | Highly educated patients had a faster cognitive decline than less educated patients. |
| Musicco et al. [a107] 2009 | Italy | Cohort | 154 | More educated persons were more likely to have faster Alzheimer’s disease progression. |
| Chaves et al. [a108] 2010 | Brazil | Cohort | 80 | More education was a strong predicator for faster cognitive decline. |
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| *Filley et al. [a90] 1985 | USA | Case-control | 28 | Higher education did not delay the onset of AD or Senile Dementia of Alzheimer Type (SDAT). |
| Montz et al. [a109] 1993 | USA | Cross-sectional | 1,658 | Reported age of onset was later among those with less education but clinically rated severity of disease was a greater among those with less education. Authors suggest low education may lead to later detection and referral for treatment. |
| *Bowler et al. [a122] 1998 | Canada | Cohort | 172 AD patients | Higher education had a modest effect on earlier reported onset of AD which probably reflecting earlier recognition. |
| *Weiner et al. [a94] 1998 | USA | Cohort s | 594 | Persons with completed high school education in contrast to those who has not completed high school present clinically at a significantly earlier age. |
| *Del Ser et al. [a125] 1999 | Canada | Cohort | 87 AD patients | Less education patients became demented later. |
| Pai et al. [a110] 2002 | Taiwan | Case-control | 155 | Education level was not related to the onset age of AD. |
| Roe et al. [a111] 2008 | USA | Case series. | 23,329 | Reported age of on set of dementia symptoms is slightly younger among those with more education. |
| Lupton et al. [a112] 2010 | UK | Cohort | 1,320 | Education did not delay the onset of AD. |
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| Stern et al. [a113] 1995 | USA | Cohort | 246 | Patients with more education had increased mortality. |
| Geerlings et al. [a114] 1997 | USA | Cohort | 4,022 age 65+ | Higher education was not associated with increased risk of mortality in AD patients. |
| *Aguero-Torres et al. [a93] 1998 | Sweden | Cohort | 243 age 75+ | Less educated subjects had significantly shorter survival. |
| *Del Ser et al. [a123] 1999 | Canada | Cohort | 87 AD patients | Less education patients became demented later and died later. |
| *Qiu et al. [a61] 2001 | Sweden | Cohort | 1,296 age 75+ | A low educational level was not related to the mortality of subjects with AD or dementia. |
| Brehaut et al. [a115] 2004 | Canada | Cohort | 9,681 age 65+ | For subjects with no cognitive impairment, higher education was associated with lower mortality, while among cognitively impaired elderly, there was no association between education and mortality. |
| Pavlik et al. [a116] 2006 | USA | Cohort | 478 | Education was not associated with survival. |
| *Bruandet et al. [a105] 2008 | France | Cohort | 670 | Highly educated and less educated patients had similar mortality rates. |
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| *Weiner et al. [a94] 1998 | USA | Cohort | 594 | Persons with completed high school education presented clinically with higher cognitive scores than persons with high school incomplete. |
| Swanwick et al. [a117] 1999 | Ireland | Case-control | 209 | Patients with only a primary-school education had a trend towards lower cognitive scores at presentation but did not have more functional deficits. |
| *Wilson et al. [a96] 2000 | USA | Cohort | 410 | Higher educational attainment was associated with higher baseline cognitive function. |
| Ott et al. [a118] 2008 | USA | Case-control | 128 | Lower education was associated with worse performance. |
| *Roe et al. [a111] 2008 | USA | Case series. | 23,329 | Participants with fewer years of education show greater clinical severity of AD at first assessment. Symptoms of AD are recognized later by those with less education. |
| Aguera-Ortiz et al. [a119] 2010 | Spain | Cohort | 1,235 mean age 77.8 | Education has shown to be beneficial in delaying the clinical manifestation of AD. |
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| Stern et al. [a120] 1992 | USA | Case-control | 58 | Cerebral blood flows were comparable in 3 groups of patients with varying levels of education. However parietotemporal perfusion deficit was significantly greater in the groups with the highest level of education indicating that AD was more advanced in this group. |
| Kidron et al. [a121] 1997 | Canada | Case-control | 32 AD patients and 20 age and gender matched healthy controls | Computerized imaging analysis techniques were applied to MR brain images. More years of education had a direct effect on parietal atrophy. Education was seen to have a tardive affect on the clinical evolution of AD. |
| Bowler et al. [a122] 1998 | Canada | Cohort | 172 AD patients | The outcome measures were age of onset, cognitive decline and post-mortem pathology. Education level, occupation level, gender, family history, year of birth, age of onset, severity of disease at entry, ischemic score, and the presence of leukouriosis, did not affect age of onset or rate of cognitive decline. |
| Del Ser et al. [a123] 1999 | Canada | Cohort | 87 AD patients | Cognitive function declined at the same rate in all educational groups and there was no difference in neurodegenerative lesions. |
| Zubenko et al. [a124] 1999 | USA | Cohort | 330 asymptomatic 1st degree relatives of probands with AD | Age increased platelet membrane fluidity and the APOE ?4 allele made significant independent contribution to the risk of developing AD while gender and years of education did not. |
| Munoz et al. [a125] 2000 | Canada | Case-control | 267 | The educational attainment for patients with autopsy-confirmed AD was no different from that of a sample of patients who underwent autopsies at the same hospital and in whom the autopsy did not show neurodegenerative disease. Occupation and income were not statistically different between the two groups. |
| Bennett et al. [a126] 2003 | USA | Cohort | 130 older Catholic clergy | Education modified the relationship of neuritic plaques and diffuse plaques to cognition but not neurofibrillary tangles. The interaction between education and neuritic plaque score was strongest for perceptual speed and weakest for episodic memory. The relation between senile plaques and level of cognition differed by years of formal education. |
| Liao et al. [a127] 2005 | USA | Case-control | 132 | Years of formal schooling had negative associations with cerebral perfusion. The authors suggest the main effect of more education is a more facile use of alternative brain circuits instead of locally increased synaptic connections. |
| Mortimer et al. [a128] 2005 | USA | Cohort | 294 Catholic sisters (the Nun Study) | Among those Catholic sisters with high (vs low) educational attainment the frequency of the clinical diagnosis of dementia before death was reduced by 26% for those with milder neuropathologically autopsy confirmed states of the disease (Braak stage 1–111) and 13% for those with more severe pathology (Braak stages IV–VI). Education has a powerful effect in reducing the clinical severity of dementia individuals with moderate AD pathology. As severity of pathology increases the protective role of education remains but is diminished. It is insufficient to mask the presence of substantial brain pathology. |
| Perneczky et al. [a129] 2006 | Germany | Case-control | 93 consecutive patients with mild AD and 16 age-matched healthy controls | There was a marked inverse association between years of schooling and glucose metabolism and glucose metabolism in the posterior temporo-occipital association cortex and the precuneus in the left hemisphere. Findings suggest that education is associated with brain reserve and those with higher education can cope with brain damage for a longer time. |
| Roe et al. [a130] 2007 | USA | Cohort | 2,372 age 65+ | Subjects with neuropathologically diagnosed AD who had more years of education are less likely to be diagnosed as demented at last clinical assessment that occurred within one year prior to death. Those clinically diagnosed as demented had an average 2 to 3 years less education than the clinical non-demented group. Individuals with more education seem able to withstand greater amounts AD-associated brain damage. |
| Hanyu et al. [a131] 2008 | Japan | Cohort | 53 AD patients | Initially the high education group (HE ≥12 years of schooling) had greater regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) deficits even though there were no differences between education groups on cognitive and functional assessment scores. The HE group demonstrated more extensive and severe reduction of rCBF on follow-up Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography (SPECT) in association with faster cognitive and functional decline. |
| Koepsell et al. [a132] 2008 | USA | Cohort | 2,051 age 65+ | When there was no evidence of post-mortem neuropathology or when the neuropathology was mild, higher education was associated with higher MMSE score. When AD neuropathology was more advanced educational differences in MMSE score became more attenuated. |
| *EClipSE Collaborative Members [a87] 2010 | Europe | Cohort | 872 | More education did not protect individuals from developing neurodegenerative and vascular neuropathology by the time they died but it did appear to mitigate the impact of pathology on the clinical expression of dementia before death. |
| Cordonnier et al. [a133] 2010 | France | Cohort | 417 Pre-existing dementia in patients with intracerebral haemorrhages | In lobar intracerebral haemorrhage, factors associated with pre-existing dementia were increasing age, low educational level and severity of atrophy suggested a neurodegenerative process this contrasted with the findings for patients who had deep intracerebral haemorrhage. Autpsied results suggests dementia is these patients is a result of two different neurodegeneration and vascular mechanisms. |