| Literature DB >> 34750718 |
Sanne S Mooldijk1, Silvan Licher1, Meike W Vernooij1,2, M Kamran Ikram1,3, M Arfan Ikram4.
Abstract
Seasonal variation in cognitive function and underlying cerebral hemodynamics in humans has been suggested, but not consistently shown in previous studies. We assessed cognitive function in 10,276 participants from the population-based Rotterdam Study, aged 45 years and older without dementia, at baseline and at subsequent visits between 1999 and 2016. Seasonality of five cognitive test scores and of a summary measure of global cognition were determined, as well as of brain perfusion. Using linkage with medical records, we also examined whether a seasonal variation was present in clinical diagnoses of dementia. We found a seasonal variation of global cognition (0.05 standard deviations [95% confidence interval: 0.02-0.08]), the Stroop reading task, the Purdue Pegboard test, and of the delayed world learning test, with the best performance in summer months. In line with these findings, there were fewer dementia diagnoses of dementia in spring and summer than in winter and fall. We found no seasonal variation in brain perfusion. These findings support seasonality of cognition, albeit not explained by brain perfusion.Entities:
Keywords: Brain perfusion; Cerebral blood flow; Cognition; Cosinor; Dementia; Season
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34750718 PMCID: PMC8810929 DOI: 10.1007/s11357-021-00485-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Geroscience ISSN: 2509-2723 Impact factor: 7.713
Summary characteristics of the study population at time of cognitive examination and of cerebral blood flow measurements
| Characteristic | Cognition ( | Cerebral blood flow ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age, years | 68.2 (10.3) | 65.4 (9.8) | < .001 |
| Women | 13,069 (57%) | 6328 (55%) | < .001 |
| Caucasian | 21,575 (96%) | 10,757 (95%) | < .001 |
| Cohort wave | < .001 | ||
| RS-I | 9333 (41%) | 1596 (14%) | |
| RS-II | 7279 (32%) | 3129 (27%) | |
| RS-III | 6318 (28%) | 6807 (59%) | |
| Education | < .001 | ||
| Primary | 2384 (10%) | 877 (8%) | |
| Lower/intermediate | 9509 (41%) | 4322 (37%) | |
| High general | 6890 (30%) | 3525 (31%) | |
| University | 4147 (18%) | 2808 (24%) | |
| CES-D | 8 [1-13] | 10 [2-13] | < .001 |
| Depressive symptoms | 2805 (12%) | 1363 (12%) | .157 |
| Mini Mental State Examination | 27.8 (2.0) | 28.1 (1.7) | < .001 |
| Cerebral blood flow, mL/min | - | 522.3 (100.1) | |
| Brain perfusion, mL/min per 100 mL | - | 55.9 (9.6) |
Values are counts (percentages), means (standard deviation), or median [interquartile range]. CES-D, Centre for Epidemiologic Studies Depression scale; RS, Rotterdam Study cohort wave. Depressive symptoms are classified as a CES-D score of 16 or higher
aCognitive examinations from 10,276 persons and cerebral blood flow measurements from 5,445 persons
Seasonality pattern in cognitive tests
| Cognitive test | Observationsa | Mean score (SD) | Seasonal variation (95% CI) | Peak | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| G-factor | 13,654 | 0.0 (1.0) | 0.05 (0.02; 0.08) | Jun. 25th | .001 |
| Letter digit substitution test | 22,344 | 28.2 (7.3) | 0.03 (0.01; 0.05) | Mar. 25th | .007 |
| Word fluency test | 22,347 | 21.8 (5.8) | 0.01 (− 0.02; 0.04) | Jun. 19th | .366 |
| Stroop | |||||
| Reading subtask | 21,734 | 17.8 (4.1) | 0.03 (0.00; 0.06) | Jun. 28th | .042 |
| Color naming subtask | 21,713 | 24.5 (6.0) | 0.00 (− 0.02; 0.03) | Feb. 1st | .703 |
| Interference subtask | 21,642 | 56.5 (27.6) | 0.02 (− 0.01; 0.04) | Mar. 8th | .196 |
| Purdue Pegboard test | |||||
| Left hand | 17,915 | 12.2 (2.1) | 0.08 (0.04; 0.11) | Jul. 10th | < .001 |
| Right hand | 17,777 | 12.5 (2.1) | 0.08 (0.05; 0.12) | Jul. 6th | < .001 |
| Both hands | 17,649 | 10.0 (1.9) | 0.10 (0.07; 0.14) | Jul. 16th | < .001 |
| Word learning test | |||||
| Immediate | 15,169 | 15.0 (8.1) | 0.03 (− 0.01; 0.08) | Apr. 29th | .099 |
| Delayed | 15,156 | 7.2 (3.0) | 0.04 (0.00; 0.08) | Jun. 23rd | .040 |
| Recognition | 15,261 | 13.3 (2.1) | 0.03 (− 0.01; 0.07) | Sep. 3rd | .160 |
aNumber of cognitive tests for which complete data on covariates in model 1 were available. SD, standard deviation; CI, confidence interval
Fig. 1Seasonality of cognition. Seasonal variation of global cognition (A) and for standardized individual cognitive tests (B–D) is plotted as a cosine function (line), based on the amplitude and acrophase (amplitude * cos(t − acrophase)), as estimated in a linear mixed model adjusted for age, sex, cohort wave, and education. The points reflect the adjusted means from a linear mixed model with time included as month, and the corresponding standard errors. The shown individual tests are selected based on indication of a seasonality pattern in the cosinor analysis. For the Purdue Pegboard test, the sum of scores with right, left, and both hands are shown
Fig. 2Dementia diagnoses by month. Number of clinical dementia diagnoses by month is presented on the left y-axis. Counts are weighted by the number of days in a month to make them comparable. The overlay line, corresponding to the right y-axis, shows the result from an unadjusted Poisson regression with cosinor terms