We aimed to describe the hierarchical structure of Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADL) and basic Activities of Daily Living (ADL) and trajectories of dependency before death in an elderly population using item response theory methodology. Data were obtained from a population-based French cohort study, the Personnes Agées QUID (PAQUID) Study, of persons aged ≥65 years at baseline in 1988 who were recruited from 75 randomly selected areas in Gironde and Dordogne. We evaluated IADL and ADL data collected at home every 2-3 years over a 24-year period (1988-2012) for 3,238 deceased participants (43.9% men). We used a longitudinal item response theory model to investigate the item sequence of 11 IADL and ADL combined into a single scale and functional trajectories adjusted for education, sex, and age at death. The findings confirmed the earliest losses in IADL (shopping, transporting, finances) at the partial limitation level, and then an overlapping of concomitant IADL and ADL, with bathing and dressing being the earliest ADL losses, and finally total losses for toileting, continence, eating, and transferring. Functional trajectories were sex-specific, with a benefit of high education that persisted until death in men but was only transient in women. An in-depth understanding of this sequence provides an early warning of functional decline for better adaptation of medical and social care in the elderly.
Both near and distance visual loss was associated with greater functional decline over time, and the combination of the two could be even worse. Public Health Implications. In the context of rapid aging of the population, maintaining good vision in the elderly represents a promising prevention track, visual impairment being common in the elderly, largely undermanaged, and mostly reversible. Further research, especially trials, is necessary to estimate the public health impact of such interventions.
Chronic pain (CP) was associated with impaired cognitive performance in several cross-sectional studies conducted in older adults; however, fewer longitudinal studies assessed this link that remains still debated. With a prospective design, the present analysis was aimed at evaluating the relationship between CP and the change in several tests assessing memory, attention, verbal fluency, and processing speed. The study population was selected from the PAQUID study, a cohort of community dwellers aged 65 years and older; 693 subjects receiving a pain assessment were included. Chronic pain was evaluated using a questionnaire administered at 3-year follow-up. Cognitive performances were assessed every 2 to 3 years between 3 and 15 years assessing general cognition (Mini-Mental State Examination), verbal and visual memory (word paired-associate test and Benton test), attention and speed processing (Wechsler Digit Symbol Substitution Test and Zazzo's Cancellation Task), and language skills and executive functions (Isaacs Set Test). The link between CP and the change in cognitive function was assessed with latent process mixed models controlled for age, sex, education, comorbidities, depression, and analgesic drugs. The association between CP and each of the cognitive scores was then tested with the same procedure. A significant relationship was observed between CP and poorer 15-year scores on global cognitive performance (P = 0.004), and specifically, the Digit Symbol Substitution Test (P = 0.002) was associated with a higher slope of decline (P = 0.02). Chronic pain is associated with a higher cognitive decline, particularly in processing speed. This result reinforces the importance of actively treating CP with pharmacological and nonpharmacological strategies to prevent its consequences, including cognitive consequences.
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