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首页> 外文期刊>Diabetic medicine: A journal of the British Diabetic Association >Severe hypoglycaemia and late-life cognitive ability in older people with Type2 diabetes: The Edinburgh Type2 Diabetes Study
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Severe hypoglycaemia and late-life cognitive ability in older people with Type2 diabetes: The Edinburgh Type2 Diabetes Study

机译:2型糖尿病老年人的严重低血糖症和晚期认知能力:爱丁堡2型糖尿病研究

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Objective To determine the association between lifetime severe hypoglycaemia and late-life cognitive ability in older people with Type2 diabetes. Methods Cross-sectional, population-based study of 1066 men and women aged 60-75years, with Type2 diabetes. Frequency of severe hypoglycaemia over a person's lifetime and in the year prior to cognitive testing was assessed using a previously validated self-completion questionnaire. Results of age-sensitive neuropsychological tests were combined to derive a late-life general cognitive ability factor, 'g'. Vocabulary test scores, which are stable during ageing, were used to estimate early life (prior) cognitive ability. Results After age- and sex- adjustment, 'g' was lower in subjects reporting at least one prior severe hypoglycaemia episode (n=113), compared with those who did not report severe hypoglycaemia (mean 'g'-0.34 vs. 0.05, P<0.001). Mean vocabulary test scores did not differ significantly between the two groups (30.2 vs. 31.0, P=0.13). After adjustment for vocabulary, difference in 'g' between the groups persisted (means -0.25 vs. 0.04, P<0.001), with the group with severe hypoglycaemia demonstrating poorer performance on tests of Verbal Fluency (34.5 vs. 37.3, P=0.02), Digit Symbol Testing (45.9 vs. 49.9, P=0.002), Letter-Number Sequencing (9.1 vs. 9.8, P=0.005) and Trail Making (P<0.001). These associations persisted after adjustment for duration of diabetes, vascular disease and other potential confounders. Conclusions Self-reported history of severe hypoglycaemia was associated with poorer late-life cognitive ability in people with Type2 diabetes. Persistence of this association after adjustment for estimated prior cognitive ability suggests that the association may be attributable, at least in part, to an effect of hypoglycaemia on age-related cognitive decline.
机译:目的探讨老年2型糖尿病患者终生严重低血糖与晚期认知能力之间的关系。方法对1066名60-75岁的2型糖尿病男性和女性进行基于人群的横断面研究。使用先前验证过的自我完成调查问卷,可以评估一个人一生中以及认知测试前一年中严重低血糖的频率。对年龄敏感的神经心理学测试的结果相结合,得出了后期的一般认知能力因子“ g”。词汇测试分数在年龄中保持稳定,用于评估早期(先前)认知能力。结果在调整了年龄和性别后,与至少未报告严重低血糖事件的受试者相比,至少有一个先前发生严重低血糖事件的受试者的“ g”值较低(n = 113)(均值“ g” -0.34 vs. 0.05, P <0.001)。两组的平均词汇测验分数没有显着差异(30.2 vs. 31.0,P = 0.13)。调整词汇量后,两组之间的“ g”差异仍然存在(平均值为-0.25 vs. 0.04,P <0.001),严重低血糖组在口语流利测试中表现较差(34.5 vs. 37.3,P = 0.02) ),数字符号测试(45.9对49.9,P = 0.002),字母数字排序(9.1对9.8,P = 0.005)和跟踪制作(P <0.001)。在调整糖尿病,血管疾病和其他潜在混杂因素的持续时间后,这些关联仍然存在。结论自我报告的严重低血糖病史与2型糖尿病患者较弱的后期认知能力有关。在对估计的先前认知能力进行调整之后,这种联系的持续存在表明该联系至少部分归因于低血糖对与年龄有关的认知下降的影响。

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