Literature DB >> 33949634

Nutritional Status and Risks of Cognitive Decline and Incident Neurocognitive Disorders: Singapore Longitudinal Ageing Studies.

Y Lu1, X Gwee, D Q Chua, T S Lee, W S Lim, M S Chong, P Yap, K B Yap, I Rawtaer, T M Liew, F Pan, T P Ng.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Studies suggest that nutritional interventions using the whole diet approach such as the Mediterranean diet may delay cognitive decline and dementia onset. However, substantial numbers of older adults are non-adherent to any ideally healthy dietary pattern and are at risk of malnutrition.
OBJECTIVE: The present study investigated the relationship between global malnutrition risk and onsets of cognitive decline and neurocognitive disorders (NCD), including mild cognitive impairment (MCI) or dementia in community-dwelling older adults.
METHODS: Participants aged ≥ 55 years in the Singapore Longitudinal Ageing Studies (SLAS) were assessed at baseline using the Elderly Nutritional Indicators for Geriatric Malnutrition Assessment (ENIGMA) and followed up 3-5 years subsequently on cognitive decline (MMSE drop ≥ 2) among 3128 dementia-free individuals, and incident neurocognitive disorders (NCD) among 2640 cognitive normal individuals.
RESULTS: Individuals at high nutritional risk score (≥ 3) were more likely to develop cognitive decline (OR=1.42, 95%CI=1.01-1.99) and incident MCI-or-dementia (OR=1.64, 95%CI=1.03-2.59), controlling for age, sex, ethnicity, low education, APOE-e4, hearing loss, physical, social, and mental activities, depressive symptoms, smoking, alcohol, central obesity, hypertension, diabetes, low HDL, high triglyceride, cardiac disease, and stroke. Among ENIGMA component indicators, low albumin at baseline was associated with cognitive decline and incident NCD, and 5 or more drugs used, few fruits/vegetables/milk products daily, and low total cholesterol were associated with incident NCD.
CONCLUSION: The ENIGMA measure of global malnutrition risk predicts cognitive decline and incident neurocognitive disorders, suggesting the feasibility of identifying vulnerable subpopulations of older adults for correction of malnutrition risk to prevent neurocognitive disorders.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Malnutrition; dementia; dietary pattern; mild cognitive impairment

Year:  2021        PMID: 33949634     DOI: 10.1007/s12603-021-1603-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Nutr Health Aging        ISSN: 1279-7707            Impact factor:   4.075


  1 in total

1.  Dynapenic abdominal obesity is associated with mild cognitive impairment in patients with cardiometabolic disease: a cross-sectional study.

Authors:  Kazuhito Oba; Yoshiaki Tamura; Joji Ishikawa; Hiroyuki Suzuki; Yoshinori Fujiwara; Aya Tachibana; Remi Kodera; Kenji Toyoshima; Yuko Chiba; Atsushi Araki
Journal:  BMC Geriatr       Date:  2022-03-28       Impact factor: 3.921

  1 in total

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