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Trajectories of depressive symptoms and associated patterns of cognitive decline

Medicine and Health

Trajectories of depressive symptoms and associated patterns of cognitive decline

T. Formánek, Z. Csajbók, et al.

This fascinating study by Tomáš Formánek, Zsófia Csajbók, Katrin Wolfová, Matěj Kučera, Sarah Tom, Dag Aarsland, and Pavla Cermakova uncovers how different patterns of depressive symptoms impact cognitive decline among older adults. It reveals that those experiencing increasing or persistently high depressive symptoms face a consistent cognitive decline, while others exhibit more varied cognitive performances. The implications of these findings are crucial for understanding mental health as we age.... show more
Abstract
The aim was to investigate the pattern and rate of cognitive decline across distinctive trajectories of depressive symptoms in older adults. In this prospective multinational cohort study on 69,066 participants (on average 64 years at baseline, 55% women), assessments of cognitive functions (immediate recall, delayed recall, verbal fluency) and depressive symptoms (EURO-D scale) were conducted at 2-year intervals. The trajectories of depressive symptoms were obtained using latent growth mixture modelling, cognitive decline was assessed using smoothing splines and linear mixed effects models. Four distinct trajectories of depressive symptoms were identified: constantly low (n = 49,660), constantly high (n = 2,999), increasing (n = 6,828) and decreasing (n = 9,579). Individuals with increasing and constantly high depressive symptoms showed linear cognitive decline, while those with constantly low and decreasing depressive symptoms had fluctuating cognition. Participants with increasing depressive symptoms had the fastest decline, while those with decreasing symptoms were spared from decline in cognition. This study suggests that the pattern as well as the rate of cognitive decline co-occurs with specific patterns of changes in depressive symptoms over time. The most pronounced cognitive decline is present in individuals in whom depressive symptoms increase late in life. Unique mechanisms of cognitive decline may exist for subgroups of the population, and are associated with the trajectory of depressive symptoms.
Publisher
Scientific Reports
Published On
Nov 30, 2020
Authors
Tomáš Formánek, Zsófia Csajbók, Katrin Wolfová, Matěj Kučera, Sarah Tom, Dag Aarsland, Pavla Cermakova
Tags
cognitive decline
depressive symptoms
older adults
mental health
cohort study
trajectories
aging
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