中风后的社交活动——它与认知功能有关吗?英国生物银行数据的横断面分析

B. Drozdowska, C. Celis-Morales, D. Lyall, T. Quinn
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引用次数: 2

摘要

背景:对老年人的研究结果表明,社会参与的衡量标准可能与健康结果有关,包括认知功能。似乎这种关联的大小和方向可能在中风中有所不同。中风的致残性增加了社交孤立的可能性,中风幸存者的认知能力下降风险很高。我们在中风幸存者的样本中评估了社会参与与认知功能之间的关系。方法:我们纳入了英国生物库中风幸存者的可用数据(N=8776;年龄范围:40-72;57.4%为男性)。在一系列回归模型中,我们评估了社会参与指标(家人/朋友来访的频率、对关系的满意度、孤独感、向某人倾诉的机会、参与社会活动)与特定领域认知任务表现之间的横断面关联:反应时间、言语数字推理、视觉记忆和前瞻记忆。我们对人口统计、健康、生活方式和中风相关因素进行了调整。考虑到多重测试,我们将显著性阈值设置为p<0.003。结果:在对协变量进行调整后,我们发现与未就诊相比,更快的反应时间和每月的家庭就诊之间存在独立关联(标准化β=0.32,99.7%CI:0.61-0.03,N=4930);较慢的反应时间和宗教团体参与(标准化β=0.25,99.7%CI 0.07至0.44,N=4938);在孤独的情况下,言语数字推理和前瞻性记忆任务的表现较差(标准化贝塔系数=0.19,99.7%置信区间-0.34至-0.03,N=2074;比值比=0.66,99.7%可信区间0.46至0.94,N=2188;分别)。在所有社会参与指标结合在一起的模型中,没有显著的关联。结论:我们发现认知表现和社会参与指标之间的任务特异性关联有限,只有孤独感与两项任务有关。需要进一步的研究来证实和提高我们对这些关系的理解,并调查针对心理社会因素支持中风幸存者认知功能的潜力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Social engagement after stroke – is it relevant to cognitive function? A cross-sectional analysis of UK Biobank data
Background: Findings from studies in older adult populations suggest that measures of social engagement may be associated with health outcomes, including cognitive function. Plausibly the magnitude and direction of this association may differ in stroke.  The disabling nature of stroke increases the likelihood of social isolation and stroke survivors are at high risk of cognitive decline. We assessed the association between social engagement and cognitive function in a sample of stroke survivors. Methods: We included available data from stroke survivors in the UK Biobank (N=8776; age range: 40-72; 57.4% male). In a series of regression models, we assessed cross-sectional associations between proxies of social engagement (frequency of family/friend visits, satisfaction with relationships, loneliness, opportunities to confide in someone, participation in social activities) and performance on domain specific cognitive tasks: reaction time, verbal-numerical reasoning, visual memory and prospective memory. We adjusted for demographics, health-, lifestyle-, and stroke-related factors. Accounting for multiple testing, we set our significance threshold at p<0.003. Results: After adjusting for covariates, we found independent associations between faster reaction times and monthly family visits as compared to no visit (standardised beta=-0.32, 99.7% CI: -0.61 to -0.03, N=4,930); slower reaction times and religious group participation (standardised beta=0.25, 99.7% CI 0.07 to 0.44, N=4,938); and poorer performance on both verbal-numerical reasoning and prospective memory tasks with loneliness (standardised beta=-0.19, 99.7% CI: -0.34 to -0.03, N=2,074; odds ratio=0.66, 99.7% CI: 0.46 to 0.94, N=2,188; respectively). In models where all proxies of social engagement were combined, no associations remained significant. Conclusions: We found limited task-specific associations between cognitive performance and proxies of social engagement, with only loneliness related to two tasks. Further studies are necessary to confirm and improve our understanding of these relationships and investigate the potential to target psychosocial factors to support cognitive function in stroke survivors.
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