Vascular Burden and Cognitive Functioning in Depressed Older Adults
The American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 07/27/2012
Clinical Article
Schneider B et al. – Vascular burden in older depressed adults contributes to cognitive impairment, particularly in domains of attention and cognitive control. The findings suggest that aggressive treatment of vascular risk factors may reduce risk for further cognitive decline in depressed older adults.
Methods- Ninety-four community-dwelling older adults (mean age = 70.8 years; SD = 7.63) diagnosed with major depression were recruited to participate in the tai chi complementary use study aimed to improve antidepressant response to an antidepressant medication.
- All participants received comprehensive evaluations of depression, apathy, and vascular risk factors, and completed a battery of cognitive measures of memory, cognitive control, verbal fluency, and attention.
- The severity of vascular burden was significantly correlated with depression severity and impaired performance on measures of cognitive control (i.e., inhibition/mental flexibility), and attention, but not memory or verbal fluency.
- Neither the severity of comorbid apathy nor medical illness burden was related to cognitive impairment.



