Showing posts with label Geriatrics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Geriatrics. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 15, 2020

Researchers Find New Method to Measure Cognitive Impairment, Dementia

This article, " Health-Deficit Accumulation Affects Risk for Mild Cognitive Impairment, Dementia," was originally published in NeurologyLive.

Using a frailty index score could enable clinicians to identify patients at risk for cognitive dysfunction, making it an important marker for prognostic value.

Newly published data suggests health-deficit accumulation, specifically among older Americans, affects the likelihood of progressive cognitive impairment, as well as the likelihood of cognitive improvement independent of the APOE ε4 allele.

Lead author David D. Ward, PhD, postdoctoral fellow, geriatric medicine research, Centre for Health Care of the Elderly, Nova Scotia Healthy Authority, and colleagues calculated a frailty index score using the deficit-accumulation approach in participants aged 50 years and older from the National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center (NACC).

Among those not cognitively impaired (NCI; n = 9773), each 0.1 increment increase in score were associated with a higher risk of developing mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and a higher risk of developing dementia.

In total, there were 14,490 participants in the study with a mean age of 72.2 years. In the MCI subsample (n = 4717) at baseline, there was a higher degree of frailty that was associated with a lower probability of being reclassified as NCI from MCI, a higher risk of returning to MCI in those who were reclassified as NCI, and a higher risk of progressing to dementia.

"We conclude that frailty is a key risk factor for age-related cognitive dysfunction and dementia, representing both a target for interventions aimed at the prevention of age-related cognitive impairment and possible prognostic marker among those who have MCI,” the authors wrote.

The score is a health-state measure, incorporating information from multiple physiological systems, and closely reflects an individual’s risk for adverse health events and mortality independently of chronological age. A higher frailty index score indicated accumulation of more age-related health deficits while approximating biological age.

The researchers aimed to detail the dynamic nature of cognitive functioning by calculating the likelihood of transitions between cognitive states in both directions over a 12-month period. Decline of cognitive function was considered forward transition, whereas improvement of cognitive functioning was defined as backwards transition.

The investigators also assessed whether frailty index score and APOE ε4 allele carrier status exerted independent or interactive effects on cognitive-state transition probabilities.

They found no statistically significant interactions between these variables for any transition in the NCI subsample. However, in the MCI subsample, the association of the frailty index score and the risk of progressing to dementia was significantly weaker in those carrying an APOE ε4 allele than in non-carriers (interaction hazard risk [HR], 0.88; 95% CI, 0.80–0.97).

There were no meaningful differences in these associations when participants whose race was other than white were removed from the analytical sample. Notably, associations of the frailty index score with transition probabilities did not differ significantly between men and women.

Over 12 months, NCI subsample participants maintained their prior state 43,086 times (90.6%) and transitioned between states 4491 times (9.4%), 3086 (68.7%) of which were transitions between cognitive states, with 1405 (31.3%) transitions to death. Of the cognitive-state transitions in the NCI subsample, 80.9% were forward transitions, and 19.1% were backward transitions. In the MCI subsample, 70.5% were forward compared to 29.5% who experienced backwards transition.

"This work supports an emerging conceptualization of late-onset dementia as a complex outcome of aging that often is intimately related to an individual’s general health, as well as genetic risk factors,” the authors wrote.

Friday, December 11, 2020

Particulate Matter Increases Future Risk of Alzheimer Disease

Progressive brain atrophy known to be predictive of Alzheimer disease (AD) is linked to late-life exposure to particulate matter with aerodynamic diameters <2.5-μm (PM2.5), according to new research.

Longitudinal analyses showed that for each interquartile range (IQR) increase (IQR, 2.82- μg/m3) of PM2.5, the associated risk of developing AD increased by 24% (hazard ratio [HR], 1.24; 95% CI, 1.14–1.34) over a 5-year period, as assessed by increased AD pattern similarity (AD-PS) scores. This association remained within levels of PM2.5 below US regulatory standards (<12-μg/m3).

Principal author Diana Younan, PhD, research associate, University of Southern California, stated in a related release that the “findings have important public health implications because not only did we find brain shrinkage in women exposed to the highest levels of PM2.5 pollution but we also found it in women exposed to levels lower than those that the EPA considers safe.”

Younan and colleagues investigated data from 1365 women free of dementia with a mean age of 77.9 years (standard deviation [SD], 2.7) that participated in the WHIMS Magnetic Resonance Imaging (WHIMS MRI) study.

MRI data at baseline and after 5 years was investigated. AD-PS scores—which have been shown to be associated with known risk factors of AD and poor cognitive function—were developed by a supervised machine learning algorithm by comparison of MRI data from the AD Neuroimaging Initiative of gray matter atrophy in areas vulnerable to AD such as the amygdala, hippocampus, thalamus, midbrain, parahippocampal gyrus, and inferior temporal lobe areas.

In longitudinal analysis, IQR-increments were significantly associated with a 0.031 (β = 0.031; 95% CI, 0.017–0.046) increase in AD-PS score.

In fully adjusted models the association was 0.026 (95% CI, 0.009–0.043), which correlates to the 24% increase of AD risk. This association remained after adjusting for socio-demographics, lifestyle, and clinical characteristics including cerebrovascular factors such as white matter lesion volume and stroke, challenging previous studies that have proposed a cerebrovascular mechanism of PM2.5 damage leading to brain atrophy.

Instead, Younan and colleagues favor the theorized mechanism that PM2.5 directly contributes to the neurodegenerative process of dementia via a neurotoxic effect on brain structure.

Sensitivity analyses confirmed the positive association between PM2.5 and AD-PS score after adjusting for baseline AD-PS scores. No association was seen between PM2.5 and baseline AD-PS score in cross sectional analyses (β = –0.004; 95% CI, –0.019 to 0.011).

Previous analyses of WHIMS MRI include region-of-interest analyses that showed residence in areas with higher PM2.5 was associated with smaller total brain and white matter volumes, and that residing in places with >12-μg/m3 concentrations of PM2.5 increased the risk of global cognitive decline by 81% and all-cause dementia by 92%.

Younan and colleagues call for future studies “to fully investigate whether the neurodegenerative effects of late-life exposures to airborne particles may be contributed by or independent of cerebrovascular damage before or during late life...to replicate these results and to thoroughly explore other measures of cerebrovascular damage that may not be captured by white matter lesions and were not explored in our study (e.g., microbleeds; lacunar infarcts).”


Wednesday, December 25, 2013

How to Start Your Own Geriatric Care Management Program

A geriatric care management program is a business that helps families coordinate care for their elderly loved ones. Duties include assessing the elder's living situation and formulating a plan of care, referring families to appropriate services and specialists, mediating between the elder and his family if there is disagreement as to what services are needed, helping the elder transition to a new living arrangement such as an assisted living facility or nursing home, and offering the elder and his family counseling and emotional support. Geriatric care managers are usually nurses, social workers, gerontologists or attorneys.

Things You'll Need


Suggestions

  1. Study your client base and your competition. Identify a niche in the market where your geriatric care management program will fit in. For instance, you might specialize in helping elders with pets or elders who have cognitive difficulties. To enhance your credibility, consider obtaining one of the four recognized geriatric care manager certifications: Care Manager Certified from the National Academy of Certified Care Managers, Certified Case Manager from the Commission for Case Manager Certification, Certified Advanced Social Worker in Case Management, or Certified Social Work Case Manager from the National Association of Social Workers.
  2. Consult a small-business attorney to obtain a local business license and attend to other legal paperwork. A sole proprietorship requires less paperwork than a partnership or a corporation. Unless your agency will be providing health care in the home or accepting funds from federal or state programs such as Medicaid, you should not need to be licensed or certified by your state.
  3. Write a business plan. The more detail you are able to put into your plan, the better. At the very least, include a mission statement and sections on the services your geriatric care management program will provide, how you plan to market yourself, who your competition is, what your budget will be and how you see the day-to-day operation of your business flowing.
  4. Locate funding sources and prepare proposals to show to potential lenders and investors. The most common funding sources are bank or government loans, grants and private investors. For government-sponsored loans, check out the Small Business Administration. Grants are harder to find, but you might investigate local foundations or the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance.
  5. Locate and set up your office. Your office can be in your home or in a commercial office building. You probably won't need that much space at first--a reception area and one or two private rooms for consultations should suffice. Office furniture can be basic, but you will need a reliable computer with Internet access and a software package like Microsoft Office, which includes among other features Word, PowerPoint, Excel and Outlook. You may also want to consider purchasing QuickBooks to handle invoicing and payroll.
  6. Develop a manual of policies and procedures. It's a good idea to run your manual past your small-business attorney, as she may be aware of hot-button issues such as workplace violence and sexual harassment that haven't occurred to you. Once your policies and procedures are complete, design the forms you will use for client assessments, care plans, communicating with the family, and billing.
  7. Brand your business. Select a slogan and logo to appear on your stationery, business cards, and advertising materials such as brochures. Order advertising materials and start advertising your business one to two months prior to opening your doors.
  8. Hire and train staff. Some people operate geriatric care management programs completely on their own, but this can be an exhausting proposition. It's a good idea to at least hire an office manager. As your business grows, you will probably also want to hire other care managers and perhaps marketers.

  Dementia Signage for the Home


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For Your Practice


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