KMID : 0869220150190020055
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Journal of Korean Geriatric Psychiatry 2015 Volume.19 No. 2 p.55 ~ p.64
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Cognitive Impairments in Clinically Stable Late-Life Depression :Relationship to Cardiovascular Risk : A Pilot Study
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Hwang In-Sun
Yim Seon-Jin Lee Joon-Noh Song Yun-Young Hong Kyung-Ki Hon Moon-Hwa Yoon Hae-Joo Eom Joo-Ran
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Abstract
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Objective£ºThe purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that cardiovascular risk is associated with cognitive impairments in clinically stable late-life depression.
Methods£ºA total of 59 clinically stable late-life depression patients over age 60 were enrolled in a cross-sectional study. Evaluation tools used in this study include Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression, Geriatric Depression Scale, State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, the Framingham general cardiovascular disease risk profile and the cognitive function battery designed for this study. Correlation analysis, analysis of variance and analysis of covariance were performed.
Results£ºPatients with higher cardiovascular risk performed significantly poorer in the domains of executive function and short-term or long-term memory. In models adjusted for age, sex, education, 10% higher cardiovascular risk was associated with poorer executive function.
Conclusion£ºOur findings suggested that cardiovascular risk could be a significant factor associated with poor executive function in clinically stable late-life depression and the management which is necessary as a component of treatment planning. This pilot study provided good prospects for future studies to document this relationship on larger samples.
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KEYWORD
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Late-life depression, Cardiovascular risk, Cognitive impairments, Executive function
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