Author:
Bleckwenn Markus,Kleineidam Luca,Wagner Michael,Jessen Frank,Weyerer Siegfried,Werle Jochen,Wiese Birgitt,Lühmann Dagmar,Posselt Tina,König Hans-Helmut,Brettschneider Christian,Mösch Edelgard,Weeg Dagmar,Fuchs Angela,Pentzek Michael,Luck Tobias,Riedel-Heller Steffi G,Maier Wolfgang,Scherer Martin
Abstract
BackgroundArteriosclerotic disorders increase the risk of dementia. As they have common causes and risk factors, coronary heart disease (CHD) could influence the course of dementia.AimTo determine whether CHD increases the speed of cognitive decline in Alzheimer’s disease, and to discuss the potential for secondary cardiovascular prevention to modify this decline.Design and settingProspective multicentre cohort study in general practices in six cities in Germany.MethodParticipants were patients with probable mild-to-moderate Alzheimer’s dementia or mixed dementia (n = 118; mean age 85.6 [±3.4] years, range 80–96 years). The authors assessed the presence of CHD according to the family physicians’ diagnosis. Cognitive performance was measured during home visits for up to 3 years in intervals of 6 months, using Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE) and Clinical Dementia Rating Sum of Boxes (CDR-SoB). The authors also recorded whether patients died in the observation period.ResultsAt baseline, 65 patients (55%) had CHD and/or a heart condition following a myocardial infarction. The presence of CHD accelerated cognitive decline (MMSE, P<0.05) by about 66%, and reduced cognitive-functional ability (CDR-SoB, P<0.05) by about 83%, but had no impact on survival.ConclusionThe study shows that CHD has a significant influence on cognitive decline in older patients with late-onset dementia. The dementia process might therefore be positively influenced by cardiovascular prevention, and this possible effect should be further investigated.
Publisher
Royal College of General Practitioners