Accelerated Cognitive Decline Seen With T2DM in Middle Age
Today, Jan. 23 -- Middle-aged patients with type 2
diabetes show accelerated cognitive decline in information processing
speed and executive function, according to a study published online Dec.
28 in Diabetes Care.
To examine the effects of baseline and incident diabetes on cognitive
function, Peggy J.J. Spauwen, from Maastricht University in the
Netherlands, and colleagues conducted cognitive testing on 1,290
individuals (40 years or older) participating in the Maastricht Aging
Study. Testing was performed at baseline and at six and 12 years.
At baseline, 68 participants had type 2 diabetes, while 54 and 57 had
incident diabetes at the six- and 12-year follow-up, respectively. Over
the 12-year follow-up, the researchers identified significantly larger
decline in information-processing speed, executive function, and delayed
word recall among those with diabetes at baseline, compared with
control subjects. There was no significant difference noted in the
decline for immediate word recall. Participants with incident diabetes
showed subtle early decrease in information-processing speed only,
compared to the controls; however, in other cognitive domains there was
no larger decline observed.
"It seems that disease-exposure time plays an important role in the
development of cognitive decline. This might provide a window of
opportunity for prevention and early treatment of diabetes-related
cognitive deficits," the authors write. "For this, it is important to
assess cognitive status at an early stage of the disease and on a
regular basis."
0 comments:
Post a Comment