If your memory feels like it's not what it once was, it could point to a future dementia risk: PLOS One
MedicalXpress Breaking News-and-Events May 15, 2020
The findings published today in PLOS ONE highlight the importance of general practitioners in listening to their older adult patient population in relation to memory.
"We found that when older adults go to their general practitioner with memory-specific subjective cognitive complaints it would be wise to take it seriously as they may predict future dementia," says Dr. Numbers.
Subjective cognitive complaints refer to an individual's self-experience of cognitive decline.
Research increasingly suggests that these subjective complaints may be the earliest detectible stage of preclinical dementia.
According to Dr. Numbers, Study Coordinator of CHeBA's Sydney Memory and Ageing Study, subjective cognitive complaints have the potential to capture everyday memory problems that are not always detected by clinical tests.
"Subjective cognitive complaints can be self-reported or reported by someone close to the individual," says Dr. Numbers.
"They can refer to specific changes in memory ability or changes in other cognitive domains like language or processing speed," she says.
The Sydney Memory and Ageing Study (MAS) investigates rates and predictors of health and cognitive decline in older adults. MAS is especially interested in when/why normally functioning adults who show evidence of memory or cognitive decline either progress to dementia or improve.
This research extends from previous work led by CHeBA which examined the relationship between self-reported memory or other cognitive concerns and those provided by family or friends, known as informants. The research assessed 873 older adults without dementia when first assessed. The study also surveyed 843 informants who knew participants well enough to comment on changes in participants' cognitive abilities.
Professor Henry Brodaty, Leader of CHeBA's Memory and Ageing Study and Co-Director of CHeBA, says that comprehensive neuropsychological assessments were carried out initially and second yearly for 6 years. Assessments were reviewed by a panel of expert clinicians who made a clinical diagnosis of dementia by consensus.
"Participant and informant memory-specific cognitive complaints were associated with the rate of global cognitive decline. If an informant noted that the person had poorer memory, 6 years later we found a decline in memory and executive function (planning, understanding, abstract thinking). The risk of dementia at follow-up was also greater if participants complained about poorer memory or if their informant noted changes in memory and non-memory types of cognition," said Professor Brodaty.
The findings emphasised the importance of an older adult's subjective presentations and the relevance of the perceptions of informants in relation to predicting cognitive decline.
"While many people with memory complaints will not develop dementia, where possible, informants should be asked to report any changes on the individual's memory and non-memory abilities, as such symptoms increases the risk of further decline," said Dr. Numbers.
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