Hearing Impairment and Incident Dementia and Cognitive Decline in Older Adults: The Health ABC Study
Johns Hopkins University · University of California, San Francisco · +8 more institutions
Abstract
Age-related peripheral hearing impairment (HI) is prevalent, treatable, and may be a risk factor for dementia in older adults. In prospective analysis, we quantified the association of HI with incident dementia and with domain-specific cognitive decline in memory, perceptual speed, and processing speed.
Data were from the Health, Aging and Body Composition (Health ABC) study, a biracial cohort of well-functioning adults aged 70-79 years. Dementia was defined using a prespecified algorithm incorporating medication use, hospital records, and neurocognitive test scores. A pure-tone average in decibels hearing level (dBHL) was calculated in the better hearing ear using thresholds from 0.5 to 4kHz, and HI was defined as normal hearing (≤25 dBHL), mild (26-40 dBHL), and moderate/severe (>40 dBHL). Associations between HI and incident dementia and between HI and cognitive change were modeled using Cox proportional hazards models and linear mixed models, respectively.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 20.35
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 32
Authors
11Topics & keywords
- Dementia
- Hazard ratio
- Medicine
- Audiology
- Decibel
- Cognition
- Confidence interval
- Hearing loss
- No poverty