Associations between multimorbidity and neuropathology in dementia: consideration of functional cognitive disorders, psychiatric illness and dementia mimics

Calum A. Hamilton, Fiona E. Matthews, Johannes Attems, Paul C. Donaghy, Daniel Erskine, John-Paul Taylor, Alan J. Thomas
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Abstract

Background

Multimorbidity, the presence of two or more health conditions, has been identified as a possible risk factor for clinical dementia. It is unclear whether this is due to worsening brain health and underlying neuropathology, or other factors. In some cases, conditions may reflect the same disease process as dementia (e.g. Parkinson's disease, vascular disease), in others, conditions may reflect a prodromal stage of dementia (e.g. depression, anxiety and psychosis).

Aims

To assess whether multimorbidity in later life was associated with more severe dementia-related neuropathology at autopsy.

Method

We examined ante-mortem and autopsy data from 767 brain tissue donors from the UK, identifying physical multimorbidity in later life and specific brain-related conditions. We assessed associations between these purported risk factors and dementia-related neuropathological changes at autopsy (Alzheimer's-disease related neuropathology, Lewy body pathology, cerebrovascular disease and limbic-predominant age-related TDP-43 encephalopathy) with logistic models.

Results

Physical multimorbidity was not associated with greater dementia-related neuropathological changes. In the presence of physical multimorbidity, clinical dementia was less likely to be associated with Alzheimer's disease pathology. Conversely, conditions which may be clinical or prodromal manifestations of dementia-related neuropathology (Parkinson's disease, cerebrovascular disease, depression and other psychiatric conditions) were associated with dementia and neuropathological changes.

Conclusions

Physical multimorbidity alone is not associated with greater dementia-related neuropathological change; inappropriate inclusion of brain-related conditions in multimorbidity measures and misdiagnosis of neurodegenerative dementia may better explain increased rates of clinical dementia in multimorbidity

痴呆症的多病症与神经病理学之间的关联:考虑功能性认知障碍、精神病和痴呆症模拟症状
背景多病(存在两种或两种以上的健康状况)已被确定为临床痴呆症的一个可能风险因素。目前还不清楚这是由于大脑健康状况恶化和潜在的神经病理学所致,还是其他因素。方法我们研究了英国 767 名脑组织捐献者的生前和尸检数据,确定了晚年多病的身体状况和特定的脑部相关疾病。我们利用逻辑模型评估了这些所谓的风险因素与尸检时痴呆症相关神经病理变化(阿尔茨海默病相关神经病理变化、路易体病理变化、脑血管疾病和以边缘为主的年龄相关 TDP-43 脑病)之间的关联。在身体多病的情况下,临床痴呆与阿尔茨海默病病理相关的可能性较小。相反,可能是痴呆症相关神经病理学的临床或前驱表现的病症(帕金森病、脑血管疾病、抑郁症和其他精神疾病)与痴呆症和神经病理学变化有关。 结论:单纯的身体多病与痴呆症相关神经病理学变化的增加无关;在多病测量中不适当地纳入脑部相关病症以及误诊神经退行性痴呆症可能更能解释多病中临床痴呆症发生率增加的原因。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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