Association of Motoric Cognitive Risk Syndrome with Cardiovascular Disease and Risk Factors: Results from an Original Study and Meta-Analysis.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_8F3FD2157721
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Association of Motoric Cognitive Risk Syndrome with Cardiovascular Disease and Risk Factors: Results from an Original Study and Meta-Analysis.
Journal
Journal of Alzheimer's disease
Author(s)
Beauchet O., Sekhon H., Barden J., Liu-Ambrose T., Chester V.L., Szturm T., Grenier S., Léonard G., Bherer L., Allali G.
Working group(s)
Canadian Gait Consortium
ISSN
1875-8908 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1387-2877
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2018
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
64
Number
3
Pages
875-887
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article ; Meta-Analysis ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't ; Review
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Motoric cognitive risk (MCR) syndrome, a recently described pre-dementia syndrome, has been associated with cardiovascular disease and their risk factors (CVDRF).
To determine whether MCR syndrome was associated with CVDRF in French community-dwelling older adults, and to quantitatively evaluate, with a systematic review and meta-analysis, the association of MCR syndrome with CVDRF.
Based on a cross-sectional design, 238 older adults without dementia were selected from the French GAIT study. An English and French systematic Medline and Embase search (without limiting date of publication) was also conducted in February 2017 using the terms "motoric cognitive risk syndrome" OR "motoric cognitive risk" OR "motoric risk". The systematic review and meta-analysis included 8 studies. CVDRF were defined as cardiovascular diseases, hypertension, diabetes, stroke, obesity and abnormal waist-hip ratio (WHR).
The prevalence of MCR syndrome in the current original study was 16.8%. MCR syndrome was associated with abnormalWHR(Odds ratio [OR] >2.8 with p < 0.020) and high blood pressure (OR >2.5 with p < 0.025). Of the 202 originally identified abstracts, 7 (3.5%) were selected for the systematic review. The meta-analysis showed that all pooled OR were significant with a p-value <0.001 (OR = 1.41 for cardiovascular diseases, 1.21 for hypertension, 1.44 for diabetes, 2.05 for stroke, and 1.34 for obesity). When pooling all CVDRF, the overall OR was 1.38 (95% CI, 1.33-1.45) with p-value <0.001.
MCR syndrome is significantly associated with CVDRF. These findings suggest that a vascular mechanism may underlie the pathophysiology of MCR syndrome.
Keywords
Cardiovascular Diseases/complications, Cardiovascular Diseases/epidemiology, Cognition Disorders/complications, Cognition Disorders/epidemiology, Gait Disorders, Neurologic/complications, Gait Disorders, Neurologic/epidemiology, Humans, Neuropsychological Tests, Prevalence, Risk Factors, Cognitive disorders, gait disorders, meta-analysis, prediction
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
05/10/2023 8:13
Last modification date
06/10/2023 6:58
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