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Mild Cognitive
Impairment distresses Health of Caregiver
Newswise,
November 28 , 2011 — When a person with
mild cognitive impairment is agitated or
restless, caregivers can expect to find
they are more edgy as well. According to
recent research conducted at Virginia
Tech, the more a caregiver’s day is
disrupted by the unsettled behaviors of
their loved one, the more they find
themselves unable to meet or balance
their own home and family work loads.
This heightens the effect of elevated
stress levels on their own bodies,
placing caregivers at risk for current
and future health problems.
Mild cognitive impairment (MCI), a
transitional stage between normal
age-related cognitive changes and early
stages of Alzheimer’s disease, is
characterized by changes in memory that may
not interfere with everyday activities but
can cause frustration and anxiety among
persons with the impairment and their family
members.
Results of the team’s research, reported in
the November
Journals of Gerontology Series B:
Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences,
particularly note the involvement of rising
cortisol levels in caregiver samples.
Cortisol is a hormone produced by the body
as the outside stress it is subjected to
increases.
“Providing support for a relative
encountering cognitive difficulties often
requires significant changes in everyday
roles and responsibilities,” said lead
author Tina
Savla,
assistant professor of human development in
the College of Liberal Arts and Human
Sciences. “These changes take a toll on
family relationships and psychological
health, and carry consequences for the care
partner’s physical health.”
According to Savla, “Dealing with the
day-to-day issues of living with a person
with MCI can allow little time for recovery
and may tax one’s
hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) system.
The dysregulation in this system likely
contributes to illnesses by further
distressing the cardiovascular, metabolic,
and immune functions.”
In order to compile study data, Savla’s team
made phone calls to 30 spouse care partners
on seven consecutive days to find out how
their time had been spent that day,
interactions with their spouse and other
family members, and their mood as well as
their spouse’s mood and behavior throughout
the day. Saliva samples were also collected
from the caregivers on four study days to
measure cortisol levels.
The team discovered that when behavioral
problems escalated, typically during the
late afternoon and early evening hours,
caregivers found it necessary to cut back on
or ignore their own scheduled chores,
leaving a backlog of unfinished business and
increasing caregiver frustration and
distress. This effect was further multiplied
when negative interactions with their
partners increased as a result, and fewer
positive interactions took place.
Difficulties and reactions reported during
the daily inter¬views were confirmed by
assaying saliva for cortisol, a
stress-related hormone. Savla suggests that
caregivers “are having stress reactions that
may put them at greater risk for physical
health problems.” Her research team found
elevated cortisol levels throughout the day
with a slower rate of decline, typically
linked with other diseases.
“The care partner-to-caregiver trajectory is
po¬tentially long in duration and
continuously challenging in scope,” said
Savla. “Helping caregivers learn effective
stress management techniques early on may be
particularly beneficial for their physical
health and psychological well-being, thus
enhanc¬ing their capacity to continue
providing assistance to and care for the
person with cognitive impairment over the
long term.”
Other researchers involved in this study are
Karen A. Roberto, director of the Center for
Gerontology and Institute for Society,
Culture and Environment; Rosemary Blieszner,
Alumni Distinguished Professor of Human
Development and associate dean of the
Graduate School; Matthew Cox, a doctoral
student in the Department of Psychology in
the College of Science; and Frank
Gwazdauskas, the David and Margaret
Lincicome Professor Emeritus of Dairy
Science in the College of Agriculture and
Life Sciences, all at Virginia Tech.
The Alzheimer’s Association and the
Commonwealth of Virginia Alzheimer’s and
Related Diseases Research Award Fund
supported this research.