Total plasma homocysteine, age, systolic blood pressure, and cognitive performance in older people.

OBJECTIVES: To investigate the relationship between total plasma homocysteine (tHcy) levels, blood pressure (BP) variables, renal function, and measures of cognitive performance in older people. DESIGN: Initial cross-sectional analysis of a prospective cohort. SETTING: United Kingdom (Oxfordshire)...

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Автори: Budge, M, De Jager, C, Hogervorst, E, Smith, A
Формат: Journal article
Мова:English
Опубліковано: 2002
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author Budge, M
De Jager, C
Hogervorst, E
Smith, A
author_facet Budge, M
De Jager, C
Hogervorst, E
Smith, A
author_sort Budge, M
collection OXFORD
description OBJECTIVES: To investigate the relationship between total plasma homocysteine (tHcy) levels, blood pressure (BP) variables, renal function, and measures of cognitive performance in older people. DESIGN: Initial cross-sectional analysis of a prospective cohort. SETTING: United Kingdom (Oxfordshire) community sample. PARTICIPANTS: One hundred fifty-eight community-dwelling volunteers aged 60 to 91. MEASUREMENTS: Neuropsychological tests (Cambridge Examination for Mental Disorders of the Elderly-Cognitive Section (CAMCOG), Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), and Geriatric Depression Scale), biochemical studies (tHcy, serum folate, vitamin B12, and serum cystatin C), BP, and other vascular risk factors. RESULTS: tHcy, age, systolic BP (SBP), and CAMCOG performance were significantly interrelated. tHcy was negatively associated with total CAMCOG score independent of years of education, serum folate, vitamin B12, and cystatin C levels. Older participants with higher tHcy levels had lower CAMCOG scores-especially men aged 70 and older. Higher tHcy levels were associated with poorer performance on the memory and perception subscores of CAMCOG but not with the other cognitive subscales or MMSE score. SBP also demonstrated a significant negative association with total CAMCOG and MMSE scores. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest independent associations between tHcy (modified by age and sex) and SBP and cognitive performance in older people. Further longitudinal study will define whether optimization of tHcy and systolic BP contributes to the maintenance of cognitive performance with successful aging.
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spelling oxford-uuid:630ad5dd-2b48-431f-9c95-24d2930be1092022-03-26T18:10:12ZTotal plasma homocysteine, age, systolic blood pressure, and cognitive performance in older people.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:630ad5dd-2b48-431f-9c95-24d2930be109EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2002Budge, MDe Jager, CHogervorst, ESmith, A OBJECTIVES: To investigate the relationship between total plasma homocysteine (tHcy) levels, blood pressure (BP) variables, renal function, and measures of cognitive performance in older people. DESIGN: Initial cross-sectional analysis of a prospective cohort. SETTING: United Kingdom (Oxfordshire) community sample. PARTICIPANTS: One hundred fifty-eight community-dwelling volunteers aged 60 to 91. MEASUREMENTS: Neuropsychological tests (Cambridge Examination for Mental Disorders of the Elderly-Cognitive Section (CAMCOG), Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), and Geriatric Depression Scale), biochemical studies (tHcy, serum folate, vitamin B12, and serum cystatin C), BP, and other vascular risk factors. RESULTS: tHcy, age, systolic BP (SBP), and CAMCOG performance were significantly interrelated. tHcy was negatively associated with total CAMCOG score independent of years of education, serum folate, vitamin B12, and cystatin C levels. Older participants with higher tHcy levels had lower CAMCOG scores-especially men aged 70 and older. Higher tHcy levels were associated with poorer performance on the memory and perception subscores of CAMCOG but not with the other cognitive subscales or MMSE score. SBP also demonstrated a significant negative association with total CAMCOG and MMSE scores. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest independent associations between tHcy (modified by age and sex) and SBP and cognitive performance in older people. Further longitudinal study will define whether optimization of tHcy and systolic BP contributes to the maintenance of cognitive performance with successful aging.
spellingShingle Budge, M
De Jager, C
Hogervorst, E
Smith, A
Total plasma homocysteine, age, systolic blood pressure, and cognitive performance in older people.
title Total plasma homocysteine, age, systolic blood pressure, and cognitive performance in older people.
title_full Total plasma homocysteine, age, systolic blood pressure, and cognitive performance in older people.
title_fullStr Total plasma homocysteine, age, systolic blood pressure, and cognitive performance in older people.
title_full_unstemmed Total plasma homocysteine, age, systolic blood pressure, and cognitive performance in older people.
title_short Total plasma homocysteine, age, systolic blood pressure, and cognitive performance in older people.
title_sort total plasma homocysteine age systolic blood pressure and cognitive performance in older people
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AT smitha totalplasmahomocysteineagesystolicbloodpressureandcognitiveperformanceinolderpeople