The role of education and psychosocial environment as factors for the development of dementia is controversial. We carried out a comparative study on the prevalence of dementia among persons over 74 years of age in two Sicilian municipalities, Troina and S. Agata Militello, with different psychosocial backgrounds. A two-stage survey was performed for both samples. In stage 1 the Mini Mental Status Examination (previously validated for the cutoff score with 100% sensitivity and the highest specificity) was used to screen a 50% random sample of persons over 74 years of age. In those referred to stage 2, the diagnosis of dementia was made by a neurologist according to DSM-III R. Three hundred and sixty-five subjects were recruited in Troina and 408 in S. Agata Militello. The minimal estimates of dementia prevalence were 21.9% (21.9% men, 21.9% women) in Troina and 28.4% (26.6% men, 29.6% women) in S. Agata Militello. Although intrasample multiple logistic exact analysis (demented vs. unproven demented) indicated poor formal education and manual occupation as risk factors for dementia, and intersample comparison (Troina vs. S. Agata Militello) showed that these variables were more frequent in Troina, we did not find a higher prevalence of dementia in this community. We discuss this apparently ambiguous result and suggest that psychosocial and cultural variables might be considered multiple interacting factors with different protective or predisposing roles for dementia. Higher or lower risk could then be the result of this complex interaction in different populations.
We performed a two-stage survey on the prevalence of dementia among people aged over 74 in Troina, northern Sicily, Italy. During the first stage people were screened by the Mini Mental Status Examination (MMSE), previously validated in our population for the cut-off score with 100% sensitivity and the best specificity to diagnose dementia. During the second stage people scoring 19 or less at the MMSE test were invited to be examined by a neurologist who diagnosed dementia according to DSM-III R. Out of 365 subjects of the initial sample 347 were screened by MMSE test and 163 scored 19 or less. Of these, 135 were neurologically and neuropsychologically examined in the second stage, and 80 proved to be demented. The minimal estimate of prevalence of dementia in our sample was 21.9% (21.9% men, 21.8% women). The poor education and psychosocial life may be the underlying condition favoring dementia in this sample of elderly people.
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