Despite mortality due to communicable diseases, poverty, and human conflicts, dementia incidence is destined to increase in the developing world in tandem with the ageing population. Current data from developing countries suggest that age-adjusted dementia prevalence estimates in 65 year olds are high (≥5%) in certain Asian and Latin American countries, but consistently low (1-3%) in India and sub-Saharan Africa; Alzheimer's disease accounts for 60% whereas vascular dementia accounts for ∼30% of the prevalence. Early-onset familial forms of dementia with single-gene defects occur in Latin America, Asia, and Africa. Illiteracy remains a risk factor for dementia. The APOE ε4 allele does not influence dementia progression in sub-Saharan Africans. Vascular factors, such as hypertension and type 2 diabetes, are likely to increase the burden of dementia. Use of traditional diets and medicinal plant extracts might aid prevention and treatment. Dementia costs in developing countries are estimated to be US$73 billion yearly, but care demands social protection, which seems scarce in these regions.
Objective: To characterize sociodemographic variations in the prevalence of AD and VaD in China. Methods: Data were collected in a 1997–1998, cross-sectional, door-to-door prevalence survey of 34,807 community residents ages ≧55 years in Beijing, Shanghai, Chengdu and Xian. Initial diagnoses of AD and VaD were assessed by clinicians using standardized protocols, according to the NINCDS-ADRDA and NINDS-AIREN criteria; diagnoses were confirmed after 6 months by repeating neuropsychological evaluations. Prevalence odds ratios were estimated in logistic models adjusting for survey design, age, and other sociodemographic factors. Results: We identified 732 prevalent cases of AD and 295 cases of VaD. Adjusting for all sociodemographic factors concurrently, prevalence odds of AD and VaD were higher in northern versus southern China. Age trends for AD appeared different in western and eastern China. AD also showed an age-adjusted elevation among women and, in the fully adjusted model, a gender education interaction indicating a female preponderance in the highest education group. North-south variation for VaD was age-dependent. In the fully adjusted model, for AD, widowed had significantly higher prevalence odds; for VaD, widowed persons and minorities had significantly lower prevalence odds; professionals had statistically significant and borderline lower prevalence odds for both VaD and AD; sales-service occupations had significantly lower odds for AD only. Conclusion: We observed variations in prevalence for AD and VaD in different regions and demographic groups in China that persisted after controlling for potential confounding factors. Sociodemographic factors are probable surrogates for conditions such as lifestyle, environment, comorbidities, and life expectancy.
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