Motoric Cognitive Risk Syndrome and the Risk of Dementia
Albert Einstein College of Medicine · Yeshiva University
Abstract
Despite growing evidence of links between gait and cognition in aging, cognitive risk assessments that incorporate motoric signs have not been examined. We sought to validate a new Motoric Cognitive Risk (MCR) syndrome to identify individuals at high risk of developing dementia.
We evaluated 997 community residing individuals aged 70 and older participating in the Einstein Aging Study over a median follow-up time of 36.9 months. MCR syndrome was defined as presence of cognitive complaints and slow gait (one standard deviation below age- and sex-specific gait speed means) in nondemented individuals. Cox models were used to evaluate the effect of MCR syndrome on the risk of developing dementia and subtypes.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 25.66
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 40
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Dementia
- Medicine
- Hazard ratio
- Cognition
- Vascular dementia
- Confounding
- Cognitive decline
- Physical therapy