SHEN Jun, WANG Ying, XI Yan, WANG Chun-ling, QIAO Yan, HUA Pei, CHEN Hui, SUN Qi. Relationship between chronic diseases and cognitive function in elderly patients of high intellectuals[J]. Shanghai Journal of Preventive Medicine, 2020, 32(8): 688-692. DOI: 10.19428/j.cnki.sjpm.2020.20306
Citation: SHEN Jun, WANG Ying, XI Yan, WANG Chun-ling, QIAO Yan, HUA Pei, CHEN Hui, SUN Qi. Relationship between chronic diseases and cognitive function in elderly patients of high intellectuals[J]. Shanghai Journal of Preventive Medicine, 2020, 32(8): 688-692. DOI: 10.19428/j.cnki.sjpm.2020.20306

Relationship between chronic diseases and cognitive function in elderly patients of high intellectuals

  • ObjectiveTo determine the relationship between chronic diseases and cognitive function in elderly patients, for the purpose of preventing and alleviating cognitive malfunction.
    MethodsA total of 100 retired high intellectuals with age older than 65 years were enrolled.They were hospitalized in Zhongshan Hospital and were requested to complete a conventional questionnaire.Cognitive function was evaluated by Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) Scale.Their chronic diseases including hypertension, coronary artery disease, diabetes mellitus were recorded and compared among subjects with different cognitive function levels.
    ResultsBased on MoCA Scale, 34 cases were sorted as having normal cognitive function, 50 cases as mild cognitive impairment, and 16 cases as moderate cognitive impairment.Patients with moderate cognitive impairment showed a significantly higher percentage of hypertension (93.8%), coronary artery disease (75.0%), stroke (56.3%), diabetes mellitus (56.3%) while the patients with normal cognitive function exhibited relatively lower percentage of the above-mentioned diseases (61.8%, 41.2%, 17.6%, 20.6%, respectively, P < 0.05).However such difference was not observed for respiratory disease and neoplastic disease among patients with different cognitive conditions (P>0.05).In addition, cardiovascular and metabolic diseases were found to be important risk factors of mild-to-moderate cognitive impairment (P=0.002).
    ConclusionPrevention and treatment of cardiovascular and metabolic diseases could be imperative to alleviate the process of cognitive impairment.
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