4.5 Article

Early Cognitive Deficits in Type 2 Diabetes: A Population-Based Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMERS DISEASE
Volume 53, Issue 3, Pages 1069-1078

Publisher

IOS PRESS
DOI: 10.3233/JAD-160266

Keywords

Apolipoprotein E4; cognition; type 2 diabetes mellitus; vascular disorders

Categories

Funding

  1. Swedish Ministry of Health and Social Affairs
  2. Swedish Research Council
  3. Swedish Research Council for Health, Working Life and Welfare
  4. Board of Research Karolinska Institute
  5. Ragnhild and Einar Lundstroms Minne Lindhes Foundation
  6. Diabetesfonden
  7. Stiftelsen For Gamla Tjanarinnor
  8. Gun och Bertil Stohnes Stiftelse (Sweden)
  9. Strokefonden
  10. American Federation for Aging Research (USA)
  11. Karolinska Instituetet (KID)
  12. Alexander von Humboldt Research Award

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Evidence links type 2 diabetes to dementia risk. However, our knowledge on the initial cognitive deficits in diabetic individuals and the factors that might promote such deficits is still limited. This study aimed to identify the cognitive domains initially impaired by diabetes and the factors that play a role in this first stage. Within the population-based Swedish National Study on Aging and Care-Kungsholmen, 2305 cognitively intact participants aged >= 60 y were identified. Attention/working memory, perceptual speed, category fluency, letter fluency, semantic memory, and episodic memory were assessed. Diabetes (controlled and uncontrolled) and prediabetes were ascertained by clinicians, who also collected information on vascular disorders (hypertension, heart diseases, and stroke) and vascular risk factors (VRFs, including smoking and overweight/obesity). Data were analyzed with linear regression models. Overall, 196 participants (8.5%) had diabetes, of which 144 (73.5%) had elevated glycaemia (uncontrolled diabetes); 571 (24.8%) persons had prediabetes. In addition, diabetes, mainly uncontrolled, was related to lower performance in perceptual speed (beta -1.10 [95% CI -1.98, -0.23]), category fluency (beta -1.27 [95% CI -2.52, -0.03]), and digit span forward (beta -0.35 [95% CI -0.54, -0.17]). Critically, these associations were present only among APOE epsilon 4 non-carriers. The associations of diabetes with perceptual speed and category fluency were present only among participants with VRFs or vascular disorders. Diabetes, especially uncontrolled diabetes, is associated with poorer performance in perceptual speed, category fluency, and attention/primary memory. VRFs, vascular disorders, and APOE status play a role in these associations.

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