2019冠状病毒病对抑郁症状和认知能力下降的短期影响:基于社区的队列研究

IF 2.8 Q2 NEUROSCIENCES
Journal of Alzheimer's disease reports Pub Date : 2025-03-24 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1177/25424823251328627
Mengmeng Ji, Darui Gao, Jie Liang, Yanyu Zhang, Yang Pan, Wenya Zhang, Yanjun Ma, Yongqian Wang, Chenglong Li, Yidan Zhu, Fanfan Zheng, Wuxiang Xie
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)感染后神经和心理后遗症可能持续存在。抑郁和认知能力下降可能会增加患阿尔茨海默病的风险。目的:评估新冠肺炎对抑郁症状和认知能力下降的影响。方法:数据来自北京市老龄化与船舶研究(BRAVE),数据包括西山社区所有居民。第一波调查于2019年10月至11月(基线)在COVID-19大流行之前进行。第二波调查由于“十项新措施”的引入而中断为两个时期,即2022年10月至11月(没有参与者被感染)和2023年3月至4月(大多数参与者被感染),这为利用线性混合模型调查COVID-19对抑郁症状和认知功能的短期影响提供了极好的机会。结果:在1012名参与者中,基线年龄中位数(四分位数间距,IQR)为60.00(56.00,65.00)岁,其中374名(36.96%)男性和479名参与者感染了COVID-19。与未感染的参与者相比,感染的参与者没有明显的抑郁症状(β = -0.047;95% CI -0.204至0.110)和全球认知加速下降(β = 0.116;95% CI -0.001至0.234)从第一波到第二波。敏感分析的结果大体一致。结论:COVID-19感染对BRAVE队列参与者抑郁症状和认知能力下降的影响不显著。需要进一步的研究来调查对神经和精神症状的长期影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The short-term impacts of COVID-2019 on depressive symptoms and cognitive decline: A community-based cohort study.

Background: Neurological and psychological sequelae may persist after the infection of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Depression and cognitive decline could increase the risk of Alzheimer's disease.

Objective: To estimate the impacts of COVID-19 on depressive symptoms and cognitive decline.

Methods: The data was from Beijing Research on Ageing and Vessel (BRAVE), which included all residents in the Xishan community. The first wave survey was performed from October to November 2019 (baseline) before the COVID-19 pandemic. The second wave survey was interrupted into two periods due to the introduction of the Ten New Measures, from October to November 2022 (no participants were infected) and from March to April 2023 (most participants were infected), providing an excellent opportunity to investigate the short-term impacts of COVID-19 on depressive symptoms and cognitive function with linear mixed models.

Results: Among a total of 1012 participants, the median (interquartile range, IQR) age at baseline was 60.00 (56.00, 65.00) years, with 374 (36.96%) men and 479 participants COVID-19 infected. Compared with uninfected participants, the infected did not suffer pronounced depressive symptoms (β = -0.047; 95% CI -0.204 to 0.110) and accelerated declines in global cognition (β = 0.116; 95% CI -0.001 to 0.234) from wave 1 to wave 2. Sensitive analyses shared generally consistent findings.

Conclusions: The impacts of COVID-19 infection on depressive symptoms and cognitive decline were not significant among participants in the BRAVE cohort. Further research is needed to investigate the long-term impacts on neurological and psychiatric symptoms.

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