2011
DOI: 10.1111/j.1532-5415.2011.03521.x
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Anxiety, Depression, and 1‐Year Incident Cognitive Impairment in Community‐Dwelling Older Adults

Abstract: Anxiety and depression appear to have different relationships with incident cognitive impairment according to sex and the nature of cognitive impairment. Clinicians should pay particular attention to anxiety in older adults because it may shortly be followed by incident cognitive treatment.

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Cited by 88 publications
(68 citation statements)
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References 52 publications
(83 reference statements)
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“…En esta misma línea, la ansiedad ha sido asociada con disminución en la función cognitiva, disminución de la actividad física, reducción de la memoria verbal y disminución del rendimiento en las funciones ejecutivas, trayendo como resultado la dificultad para completar varias tareas al mismo tiempo, reduciendo la capacidad de participar en funciones sociales (Potvin et al, 2011;Yochima et al, 2013). De modo similar, se encontró, que la percepción de falta de apoyo social y los estereotipos negativos predice significativamente mayor ansiedad hacia el envejecimiento, y que, las personas experimentan ansiedad al notar deterioro en las actividades básicas de la vida diaria y a medida que necesitan depender de los demás (Arroyo y Soto, 2013;Ramírez y Palacios-Espinosa, 2016).…”
Section: Introductionunclassified
“…En esta misma línea, la ansiedad ha sido asociada con disminución en la función cognitiva, disminución de la actividad física, reducción de la memoria verbal y disminución del rendimiento en las funciones ejecutivas, trayendo como resultado la dificultad para completar varias tareas al mismo tiempo, reduciendo la capacidad de participar en funciones sociales (Potvin et al, 2011;Yochima et al, 2013). De modo similar, se encontró, que la percepción de falta de apoyo social y los estereotipos negativos predice significativamente mayor ansiedad hacia el envejecimiento, y que, las personas experimentan ansiedad al notar deterioro en las actividades básicas de la vida diaria y a medida que necesitan depender de los demás (Arroyo y Soto, 2013;Ramírez y Palacios-Espinosa, 2016).…”
Section: Introductionunclassified
“…Furthermore, irrespective Anxiety in old age and dementia -implications for clinical and research practice speed, attention shifting and inhibition in subsyndromal anxiety [72] in older adults, the majority of studies, especially those related to memory and executive function, have tended to include clinical samples, i.e., individuals meeting full diagnostic criteria for anxiety disorders or with comorbid anxiety and depressive disorders [12]. Arguably, this approach is at odds with the known high prevalence of sub-syndromal anxiety [12,76].…”
Section: The Potential Impact Of Anxietymentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Anxiety in general is associated with decreased cognitive functioning in older adulthood and increased risk of cognitive decline [35,36,51,62,[72][73][74][75][76]. Although there is some evidence of decreased performance in some components of cognition, including processing vision, attention, inhibition, sleep, health and depression…”
Section: Anxiety Older Adulthood Mild Cognitive Impairment and Demementioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to metacognitive theory, disturbances in thinking and emotion might emerge from metacognitions such as worry (Wells, 2009). Metacognitive theory was useful for understanding the roles of cognitive impairments such as implicit memory, depression, and anxiety in CAD (Potvin, Forget, Grenier, Preville, & Hudson, 2011). Finally, commonsense theory of mindbody interaction suggests that a person has both a mind and a body and that the quality of mind-body interaction can mediate sensations (Gordon & Hobbs, 2011).…”
Section: The Present Studymentioning
confidence: 99%