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Impaired
Kidney Function Llinked to Cognitive Decline
in Elderly
Newswise — A new study published in the
medical journal Neurology suggests that
impaired kidney function is a risk factor
for cognitive decline in old age.
The study, conducted by researchers at Rush
University Medical Center, found that poor
kidney function was linked specifically with
cognition related to memory functions.
Damage to one of these functions, episodic
memory, which retrieves memories of time,
place, associated emotions and other
contextual knowledge, is often the earliest
sign of Alzheimer’s disease.
Given the dearth of modifiable risk factors
for age-related cognitive decline, these
results have important public health
implications,” said Dr. Aron Buchman, a
neuroscientist in the Rush Alzheimer’s
Disease Center.
“Further work to understand the link between
kidney function and the brain may provide
new strategies for preventing memory loss in
elders.”
Buchman said the findings suggest that there
are common disease processes that affect
both the brain and the kidneys in the
elderly, and hypothesized that underlying
vascular problems, such as diabetes and
hypertension, may account for the
association between kidney problems and
cognitive decline.
The study analyzed data for 886 older adults
who participated in the Rush Memory and
Aging Project, a group of community-dwelling
seniors with a mean age of 81, all of them
initially free of dementia.
The participants were examined annually for
up to six years to track changes in
cognition over time. Cognitive assessments
included multiple tests that were summarized
as a composite measure of overall cognition
and of five individual cognitive abilities.
The individual cognitive systems assessed
were visuospatial ability; perceptual speed,
or the ability to quickly and accurately
compare letters, numbers, objects, pictures
or patterns; semantic memory, related to
meaning, understanding and other
concept-based knowledge; working memory,
which temporarily stores and manipulates
information; and episodic memory.
Ruling out the influence of factors like
aging and medications, which can affect
cognition, the researchers found that poor
kidney function, assessed at the beginning
of the study, was linked with a more rapid
rate of decline in cognition over the next
several years – not in visuospatial ability
or perceptual speed, but in three specific
areas: episodic, semantic and working
memory.
The rate of decline in cognition was
equivalent to that of a person seven years
older at baseline, Buchman said.
The study was supported by funds from the
National Institute on Aging, the Illinois
Department of Public Health and the Robert
C. Borwell Endowment Fund.
About Rush:
Rush University Medical Center includes a
674-bed (staffed) hospital; the Johnston R.
Bowman Health Center; and Rush University
(Rush Medical College, College of Nursing,
College of Health Sciences and the Graduate
College).
Rush is currently constructing a 14-floor,
806,000-square-foot hospital building at the
corner of Ashland Avenue and Congress
Parkway. The new hospital, scheduled to open
in 2012, is the centerpiece of a $1-billion,
10-year campus redevelopment plan called the
Rush Transformation, which also includes a
new orthopedics building (to open in Fall
2009), a new parking garage and central
power plant completed in June 2009,
renovations of selected existing buildings
and demolition of obsolete buildings.
The new hospital is being designed and built
to conserve energy and water, reduce waste
and use sustainable building materials. Rush
is seeking Leadership in Energy and
Environmental Design (LEED) gold
certification from the U.S. Green Building
Council. It will be the first full-service
“green” hospital in Chicago.
Rush’s mission is to provide the best
possible care for our patients. Educating
tomorrow’s health care professional,
researching new and more advanced treatment
options, transforming our facilities and
investing in new technologies—all are
undertaken with the drive to improve patient
care now, and for the future.
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