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Journal Article

Citation

Peeters G, Feeney J, Carey D, Kennelly S, Kenny RA. Int. J. Geriatr. Psychiatry 2019; 34(8): 1275-1282.

Affiliation

Mercer's Institute for Successful Ageing, St James's Hospital, Dublin 8, Ireland.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/gps.5133

PMID

31034696

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Fear of falling (FoF) may be an early marker of decline in global cognitive functioning, but associations with specific domains of cognitive functioning are unclear. The aim was to examine associations between FoF and 4-year decline in memory, processing speed and executive functioning in adults aged 50 years and older.

METHODS: Data were from 5,174 participants (mean age=62.6±8.9, range=50-91, 54.5% female) in The Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing, a population-based study. MEASUREMENTS: FoF was self-reported in 2009-11. Immediate and delayed recall, colour trails 1 and 2, choice reaction time, sustained attention to response task and verbal fluency were measured in 2009-11 and 2014-15. Prospective associations between FoF and domains of cognitive functioning were examined using linear mixed modelling. Adjustment was made for demographic and health factors. Interactions with age were examined.

RESULTS: In 2009-11, 20.6% of participants reported FoF. No statistically significant interaction of FoF with age was found for any of the associations (p≥0.06). Participants with FoF had greater decline on delayed recall (B=-0.19, CI=-0.32;-0.06), verbal fluency (B=-0.52, CI=-0.88;-0.18) and the ln-transformed scores for the Colour Trails 1 test (B=-0.04, CI=-0.07, -0.01) and the Colour Trails 2 test (B=-0.04, CI=-0.06, -0.02) than participants without FoF. No statistically significant associations were found for any of the other outcomes.

CONCLUSIONS: Fear of falling may be an indicator of decline in domains of cognitive functioning, particularly related to executive function and processing speed. However studies with longer follow-up and/or higher average age are required to confirm this.

This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Anxiety; cognitive function; executive function; old age

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