Association between Hearing Aid Use and Cognitive Function in Persons with Hearing Impairment Stratified by Cardiovascular Risk

Author:

Tomida Kouki1ORCID,Lee Sangyoon1,Makino Keitaro1ORCID,Katayama Osamu1ORCID,Harada Kenji1,Morikawa Masanori1,Yamaguchi Ryo1ORCID,Nishijima Chiharu1ORCID,Fujii Kazuya1ORCID,Misu Yuka1ORCID,Shimada Hiroyuki1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Preventive Gerontology, Center for Gerontology and Social Science, National Center for Geriatrics and Gerontology, Obu 474-8511, Aichi, Japan

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to conduct a cross-sectional analysis of the association between hearing aid use and cognitive decline in community-dwelling older adults with hearing impairment, stratified by cardiovascular risk level. This cross-sectional study covers 1857 hearing-impaired individuals selected among 10,674 community-dwelling older adults (≥65 years of age) in Japan. We investigate the association between hearing aid use and cognitive decline stratified by cardiovascular risk level, by assessing self-reported hearing impairment and hearing aid use, absolute cardiovascular risk, cognitive function, and potential confounding factors. The association between hearing impairment severity and increased cardiovascular risk, and the benefit of hearing aid use in preventing cognitive decline, were examined in a binomial logistic regression analysis, with the presence of cognitive decline as the objective variable. In the low cardiovascular risk group, hearing aid users had a lower odds ratio for decline in executive function than non-users (odds ratio = 0.61, 95% confidence interval: 0.39–0.98). However, there was no significant association between hearing aid use and cognitive decline in the high cardiovascular risk group (p > 0.05). Among older adults with hearing impairment, hearing aid use was associated with the maintenance of executive function in individuals of low cardiovascular risk.

Funder

AMED

Research Funding for Longevity Sciences from the National Center for Geriatrics and Gerontology

JSPS KAKENHI Grant in Aid of Scientific Research Activity start-ups

Grant in Aid of Young Scientists

Publisher

MDPI AG

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