Brendan L. McNeish , Iva Miljkovic , Matthew A. Allison , Timothy Hughes , Ilya Nasrallah , Eric Terkpertey , Caterina Rosano
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
Prior research linking myosteatosis with cognition in older adults has been conducted in relatively homogenous populations with narrow age ranges. We evaluated if abdominal myosteatosis was associated with processing speed in a multiethnic cohort of middle aged and older adults.
Methods
The sample included 1,268 adults (46–86 years-old, mean 63±9 years, 53 % female, 41 % White, 20 % Black, 14 % Chinese, and 25 % Hispanic), a subset from the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis. Bivariate analyses examined the relationships between abdominal computed tomography-derived muscle density (measure of myosteatosis) at clinical exam 3, Digit Symbol Coding (DSC) performance at clinical exam 5, and cytokine levels from clinical exam 1. Multivariable models were adjusted for demographics, education, general cognition, and further adjusted for other known predictors of dementia: APOE-4, physical activity, diabetes, cholesterol, smoking, and blood pressure. We assessed whether central adiposity, general adiposity, and cytokines modified this association. We tested interactions by ethnicity, sex, and age.
Results
Rectus abdominis myosteatosis was significantly associated with worse DSC (B=-0.247, 95 % CI: 0.098,0.396, p = 0.001) independent of demographics, education, general cognition, and dementia risk factors. Adjustment for central adiposity, and cytokines did not attenuate the associations and interactions by ethnicity, sex, and age were not statistically significant.
Conclusions
Rectus abdominis myosteatosis is associated with worse processing speed in this middle and older aged multiethnic population of men and women, independent of known predictors of cognition. Longitudinal studies should assess the interplay of myosteatosis with other markers of adiposity, inflammation, and circulating mediators and their impact on processing speed.
期刊介绍:
Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics provides a medium for the publication of papers from the fields of experimental gerontology and clinical and social geriatrics. The principal aim of the journal is to facilitate the exchange of information between specialists in these three fields of gerontological research. Experimental papers dealing with the basic mechanisms of aging at molecular, cellular, tissue or organ levels will be published.
Clinical papers will be accepted if they provide sufficiently new information or are of fundamental importance for the knowledge of human aging. Purely descriptive clinical papers will be accepted only if the results permit further interpretation. Papers dealing with anti-aging pharmacological preparations in humans are welcome. Papers on the social aspects of geriatrics will be accepted if they are of general interest regarding the epidemiology of aging and the efficiency and working methods of the social organizations for the health care of the elderly.