Author:
Friedmann Erika,Gee Nancy R.,Simonsick Eleanor M.,Kitner-Triolo Melissa H.,Resnick Barbara,Adesanya Ikmat,Koodaly Lincy,Gurlu Merve
Abstract
AbstractPet ownership has been associated with reduced deterioration in physical health as older adults age; little research focused on deterioration in cognitive function. We examine the relationship of pet, dog, cat ownership, and dog walking to changes in cognitive function among 637 generally healthy community-dwelling older adults (185 pet owners) aged 50–100 years (M = 68.3, SD = 9.6) within the BLSA. Cognitive assessments every 1–4 years over 1–13 years (M = 7.5, SD = 3.6) include the California Verbal Learning (Immediate, Short, Long Recall); Benton Visual Retention; Trail-Making (Trails A, B, B-A); Digit Span; Boston Naming (Naming); and Digit Symbol Substitution (Digit Symbol) Tests. In linear mixed models, deterioration in cognitive function with age was slower for pet owners than non-owners (Immediate, Short, Long Recall; Trails A,B,B-A; Naming; Digit Symbol); dog owners than non-owners (Immediate, Short Recall; Trails A,B; Naming; Digit Symbol); and cat owners than non-owners (Immediate, Short, Long Recall; Naming), controlling for age and comorbidities. Among dog owners (N = 73) walkers experienced slower deterioration than non-walkers (Trails B, B-A; Short Recall). All ps ≤ 0.05. We provide important longitudinal evidence that pet ownership and dog walking contribute to maintaining cognitive function with aging and the need to support pet ownership and dog walking in design of senior communities and services.
Funder
Waltham Centre for Pet Nutrition
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference69 articles.
1. Lamar, M., Resnick, S. M. & Zonderman, A. B. Longitudinal changes in verbal memory in older adults: Distinguishing the effects of age from repeat testing. Neurology 60, 82–86 (2003).
2. McCarrey, A. C., An, Y., Kitner-Triolo, M. H., Ferrucci, L. & Resnick, S. M. Sex differences in cognitive trajectories in clinically normal older adults. Psychol. Aging 31, 166–175 (2016).
3. Ritchie, K., Touchon, J., Ledesert, B., Leibovici, D. & Gorce, A. Establishing the limits and characteristics of normal age-related cognitive decline. Rev. Epidemiol. Sante Publique 45, 373–381 (1997).
4. Sinnett, E. R. & Holen, M. C. Assessment of memory functioning among an aging sample. Psychol. Rep. 84, 339–350 (1999).
5. Small, S. A., Stern, Y., Tang, M. & Mayeux, R. Selective decline in memory function among healthy elderly. Neurology 52, 1392–1392 (1999).
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献