A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Education as a moderator of middle-age cardiovascular risk factor-old-age cognition relationships: testing cognitive reserve hypothesis in epidemiological study




AuthorsIso-Markku Paakko, Kaprio Jaakko, Lindgren Noora, Rinne Juha O, Vuoksimaa Eero

PublisherOXFORD UNIV PRESS

Publication year2022

JournalAge and Ageing

Journal name in sourceAGE AND AGEING

Journal acronymAGE AGEING

Article number afab228

Volume51

Issue2

Number of pages8

ISSN0002-0729

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afab228

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/174873580


Abstract

Background: higher educational attainment and less midlife cardiovascular risk factors are related to better old-age cognition. Whether education moderates the association between cardiovascular risk factors and late-life cognition is not known. We studied if higher education provides resilience against the deteriorative effects of higher middle-age body mass index (BMI) and a combination of midlife cardiovascular risk factors on old-age cognition.

Methods: the study population is the older Finnish Twin Cohort (n = 4,051, mean age [standard deviation, SD] = 45.5 years [6.5]). Cardiovascular risk factors and education were studied at baseline with questionnaires in 1975, 1981 and/or 1990 (participation rates of 89, 84 and 77%, respectively). Cognition was evaluated with telephone interviews (participation rate 67%, mean age [SD] =73.4 [2.9] years, mean follow-up [SD] = 27.8 [6.0] years) in 1999-2017. We studied the main and interactive effects of education and BMI/dementia risk score on late-life cognition with linear regression analysis. The study design was formulated before the pre-defined analyses.

Results: years of education moderated the association between BMI with old-age cognition (among less educated persons, BMI-cognition association was stronger [B = -0.24 points per BMI unit, 95% CI -0.31, -0.18] than among more educated persons [B = -0.06 points per BMI unit, 95% CI -0.16, 0.03], Pinteraction < 0.01). There was a similar moderating effect of education on dementia risk score consisting of cardiovascular risk factors (P < 0.001).

Conclusions: our results support the cognitive reserve hypothesis. Those with higher education may tolerate the deteriorative effects of midlife cardiovascular risk factors on old-age cognition better than those with lower education.


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Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 23:24