Cognitive impairment and cardiovascular medication use: Results from wave 1 of The Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing.
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Rohde et al 2017 Cardiovascular ...
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Issue Date
2017-08-24Keywords
CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASECOGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT
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MEDICINES MANAGEMENTCARDIOVASCULAR MEDICATION
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Cognitive impairment and cardiovascular medication use: Results from wave 1 of The Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing. 2017 Cardiovasc TherPublisher
Cardiovascular TherapeuticsJournal
Cardiovascular therapeuticsDOI
10.1111/1755-5922.12300PubMed ID
28836733Abstract
To explore the association between cardiovascular medication use and cognitive impairment in adults aged 50 years and over.This cross-sectional linked database study involved secondary quantitative analysis of 1903 participants from wave 1 of the Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing with available pharmacy claims data. Cognitive impairment was assessed using a cut-off of ≤23 on the Montreal Cognitive Assessment. Cardiovascular medication use was calculated using the proportion of days covered for antihypertensive, antithrombotic, and lipid-modifying medications. For each class of cardiovascular medication, participants were categorized as belonging to one of three medication use groups: (1) not dispensed any medications (reference); (2) poor adherence (proportion of days covered <80%); and (3) good adherence (proportion of days covered ≥80%).
Controlling for demographic and health variables, there was no evidence of an independent association between impaired cognitive function and use of antihypertensives [good adherence OR (95% CI): 1.16 (0.88, 1.52), poor adherence OR (95% CI): 1.39 (0.95, 2.04)]; antithrombotics [good adherence OR (95% CI): 1.26 (0.93, 1.70), poor adherence OR 95% CI): 1.13 (0.80, 1.59)]; or lipid-modifying agents [good adherence OR (95% CI): 0.95 (0.71, 1.25), poor adherence OR (95% CI): 0.88 (0.64, 1.22)].
We found no evidence of an association between cardiovascular medication use and cognitive function. Future studies should investigate the prospective associations between cognition and use of cardiovascular medications using longitudinal data.
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ArticleLanguage
enISSN
1755-5922ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1111/1755-5922.12300
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