Openness and age influence cognitive progression: a longitudinal study

Author:

Merlin Silvia Stahl1ORCID,Brucki Sonia Maria Dozzi1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Universidade de São Paulo, Departamento de Neurologia, Unidade de Neurologia Cognitiva e Comportamental, São Paulo SP, Brazil.

Abstract

Abstract Background Some psychological and personality characteristics of individuals seem to determine behavioral patterns that are associated with better health throughout life and, consequently, prevent the progression of early cognitive changes to dementia. Objective To identify which individuals have modified cognitive ratings after 24 months of follow-up and correlating with personality traits. Methods One hundred and two volunteers were evaluated clinically and for personality characteristics and neuropsychological testing. Of these, 25 subjects were classified as cognitively normal (CN), 25 as subjective cognitive decline (SCD), 28 as nonamnestic mild cognitive impairment (naMCI), and 24 as amnestic mild cognitive impairment (amMCI) at baseline. Follow-up occurred over 2 years from the initial assessment, and the cognitive categories of the participants were re-analyzed every 6 months to observe differences in their classification. Results Out of the 102 subjects, 65 remained at follow-up. The sample followed-up longitudinally was composed predominantly of women (65%), white (74%), with a mean age of 78 (±7.5) years old and 12 (±4.8) years of schooling. Throughout the process, 23% of CN, 15% of SDC, and 27% of naMCI individuals worsened cognitively. Amnestic with mild cognitive impairment volunteers remained stable or improved. Individuals with older age show more significant cognitive deterioration, and those with very low or high rates of the openness personality trait are associated with cognitive decline utilizing the Fisher exact test, probably because the open extremes influence choices, stress management, and behavioral maintenance. Conclusion The factors most associated with cognitive change in this group of older adults were age and the intensity of the openness aspects of personality.

Publisher

Georg Thieme Verlag KG

Subject

Neurology,Neurology (clinical)

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