Daina L STURNIEKS , Lloyd LY CHAN , Maria Teresa ESPINOZA CERDA , Carmen HERRERA ARBONA , Beatriz HERRERO PINILLA , Paula SANTIAGO MARTINEZ , Nigel Wei SENG , Natassia SMITH , Jasmine C MENANT , Stephen R LORD
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective
To identify which cognitive functions and specific neuropsychological assessments predict falls in older people living in the community.
Methods
Five electronic databases were searched until 30/08/2022 for studies assessing the association between specific cognitive functions and faller status (prospective and retrospective), in community-dwelling older people. Risk of bias was assessed with the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. Meta-analyses synthesised the evidence regarding the associations between different neurocognitive subdomains and faller status.
Results
Thirty-eight studies (20 retrospective, 18 prospective) involving 37,101 participants were included. All but one study was rated high or medium quality. Meta-analyses were performed with data from 28 studies across 11 neurocognitive subdomains and four specific neuropsychological tests. Poor cognitive flexibility, processing speed, free recall, working memory and sustained attention were significantly associated with faller status, but poor verbal fluency, visual perception, recognition memory, visuo-constructional reasoning and language were not. The Trail Making Test B was found to have the strongest association with faller status.
Conclusion
Poor performance in neurocognitive subdomains spanning processing speed, attention, executive function and aspects of memory are associated with falls in older people, albeit with small effect sizes. The Trail Making Test, a free-to-use, simple assessment of processing speed and mental flexibility, is recommended as the cognitive screening test for fall risk in older people.
期刊介绍:
Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics provides a medium for the publication of papers from the fields of experimental gerontology and clinical and social geriatrics. The principal aim of the journal is to facilitate the exchange of information between specialists in these three fields of gerontological research. Experimental papers dealing with the basic mechanisms of aging at molecular, cellular, tissue or organ levels will be published.
Clinical papers will be accepted if they provide sufficiently new information or are of fundamental importance for the knowledge of human aging. Purely descriptive clinical papers will be accepted only if the results permit further interpretation. Papers dealing with anti-aging pharmacological preparations in humans are welcome. Papers on the social aspects of geriatrics will be accepted if they are of general interest regarding the epidemiology of aging and the efficiency and working methods of the social organizations for the health care of the elderly.