Depression and Cognitive Impairment Are Associated with Low Education and Literacy Status and Smoking but Not Caffeine Consumption in Urban African Americans and White Adults.

Andrew V Kuczmarski, Nancy Cotugna, Marc A Mason, Michele K Evans, Alan B Zonderman
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引用次数: 14

Abstract

Background: Recent research has linked caffeine consumption with a lower risk for depression and cognitive decline. However, no studies have examined the relationship in an African American compared to a white, socioeconomically diverse representative urban sample. Methods: Data from a cross-sectional study were used to determine the associations of caffeine use with depressive symptomatology and cognition in a sample of 1,724 participants in the Healthy Aging in Neighborhoods of Diversity across the Life Span (HANDLS) study. The United States Department of Agriculture's Automated Multiple Pass Method was used by trained interviewers to collect two, in-person 24-hour dietary recalls. Depressive symptoms and global cognition were assessed using two well-validated measures: the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depressive Scale (CES-D) and Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE), respectively. Usual caffeine intake was based on both recalls. Data were analyzed with t- and chi-square tests, correlation analysis, and ordinal logistic regression. Results: African Americans consumed significantly less caffeine than did whites (89.0±3.2 and 244.0±8.7 mg respectively). Caffeine consumption was not associated with depressive symptomatology or global cognition. Age, less than 5th grade literacy, and less than high school education were significantly associated with both depressive symptoms and cognitive function. Smokers had a 43% greater risk for depression but only a 3% higher risk for cognitive impairment. Conclusion: The low level of dietary caffeine intake in combination with smoking among HANDLS study participants may have influenced the lack of association with depressive symptomatology or global cognition. For this sample, low literacy and education appear more highly associated with depressive symptoms and cognitive function than caffeine intake.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

在城市非裔美国人和白人成年人中,抑郁和认知障碍与教育程度低、文化程度低和吸烟有关,但与咖啡因摄入无关。
背景:最近的研究将咖啡因摄入与抑郁和认知能力下降的风险降低联系起来。然而,没有研究将非裔美国人与社会经济多样化的白人代表性城市样本进行比较。方法:来自横断面研究的数据被用来确定咖啡因使用与抑郁症状和认知的关系,在1724名参与者的样本中,多样性社区的健康老龄化(HANDLS)研究。经过培训的采访者使用美国农业部的自动多次通过方法收集了两次24小时的面对面饮食召回。抑郁症状和整体认知分别使用两种有效的测量方法进行评估:流行病学研究中心抑郁量表(CES-D)和迷你精神状态检查(MMSE)。通常的咖啡因摄入量是基于两种回忆。数据分析采用t检验、卡方检验、相关分析和有序逻辑回归。结果:非洲裔美国人摄入的咖啡因明显少于白人(分别为89.0±3.2 mg和244.0±8.7 mg)。咖啡因摄入与抑郁症状或整体认知无关。年龄、低于五年级的文化水平和低于高中教育程度与抑郁症状和认知功能显著相关。吸烟者患抑郁症的风险高出43%,但患认知障碍的风险仅高出3%。结论:在HANDLS研究参与者中,低水平的饮食咖啡因摄入加上吸烟可能影响了与抑郁症状或整体认知缺乏关联。在这个样本中,低文化水平和受教育程度与抑郁症状和认知功能的关系似乎比咖啡因摄入更密切。
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