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Cognitive reserve proxies are associated with age-related cognitive decline – Not age-related gait speed decline

  • Helena M. Blumen
  • , Oshadi Jayakody
  • , Emmeline Ayers
  • , Nir Barzilai
  • , Christian Habeck
  • , Sofiya Milman
  • , Yaakov Stern
  • , Erica F. Weiss
  • , Joe Verghese
  • Albert Einstein College of Medicine
  • Columbia University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

Cognition and gait share brain substrates in aging and dementia. Cognitive reserve (CR) allows individuals to cope with brain pathology and delay cognitive impairment and dementia. Yet, evidence for that CR is associated with age-related cognitive decline is mixed, and evidence for that CR is associated with age-related gait decline is limited. In 1,079 older (M Age = 75.4 years; 56.0% women) LonGenity study participants without dementia at baseline and up to 12 years of annual follow-up (M follow-up = 3.9 years, SD = 2.5 years), high CR inferred from cognitive (education years), physical (number of blocks walked per day; weekly physical activity days), and social (volunteering/working; living with someone) proxies were associated with slower rates of age-related decline in global cognition – not gait speed decline. Thus, cognitive, physical, and social CR proxies are associated with cognitive decline in older adults without dementia. The multifactorial etiology and earlier decline in gait than cognition may render it less modifiable by CR proxies later in life.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)46-54
Number of pages9
JournalNeurobiology of Aging
Volume141
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2024

Keywords

  • Brain maintenance
  • Cognitive decline
  • Cognitive reserve
  • Frontal cortical thickness
  • Gait decline
  • Hippocampal volume

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