9 resultados para elders
em Université de Lausanne, Switzerland
Resumo:
There are controversial reports about the effect of aging on movement preparation, and it is unclear to which extent cognitive and/or motor related cerebral processes may be affected. This study examines the age effects on electro-cortical oscillatory patterns during various motor programming tasks, in order to assess potential differences according to the mode of action selection. Twenty elderly (EP, 60-84 years) and 20 young (YP, 20-29 years) participants with normal cognition underwent 3 pre-cued response tasks (S1-S2 paradigm). S1 carried either complete information on response side (Full; stimulus-driven motor preparation), no information (None; general motor alertness), or required free response side selection (Free; internally-driven motor preparation). Electroencephalogram (EEG) was recorded using 64 surface electrodes. Alpha (8-12 Hz) desynchronization (ERD)/synchronization (ERS) and motor-related amplitude asymmetries (MRAA) were analyzed during the S1-S2 interval. Reaction times (RTs) to S2 were slower in EP than YP, and in None than in the other 2 tasks. There was an Age x Task interaction due to increased RTs in Free compared to Full in EP only. Central bilateral and midline activation (alpha ERD) was smaller in EP than YP in None. In Full just before S2, readiness to move was reflected by posterior midline inhibition (alpha ERS) in both groups. In Free, such inhibition was present only in YP. Moreover, MRAA showed motor activity lateralization in both groups in Full, but only in YP in Free. The results indicate reduced recruitment of motor regions for motor alertness in the elderly. They further show less efficient cerebral processes subtending free selection of movement in elders, suggesting reduced capacity for internally-driven action with age.
Resumo:
BACKGROUND: Elderly schizophrenia patients frequently develop cognitive impairment of unclear etiology. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies revealed brain structural abnormalities, but the pattern of cortical gray matter (GM) volume and its relationship with cognitive and behavioral symptoms are unknown. METHODS: Magnetic resonance scans were taken from elderly schizophrenia patients (n = 20, age 67 +/- 6 SD, Mini-Mental State Examination [MMSE] 23 +/- 4), Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients (n = 20, age 73 +/- 9, MMSE 22 +/- 4), and healthy elders (n = 20, age 73 +/- 8, MMSE 29 +/- 1). Patients were assessed with a comprehensive neuropsychological and behavioral battery. Cortical pattern matching and a region-of-interest analysis, based on Brodmann areas (BAs), were used to map three-dimensional (3-D) profiles of differences in patterns of gray matter volume among groups. RESULTS: Schizophrenia patients had 10% and 11% lower total left and right GM volume than healthy elders (p < .001) and 7% and 5% more than AD patients (p = .06 and ns). Regions that had both significantly less gray matter than control subjects and gray matter volume as low as AD mapped to the cingulate gyrus and orbitofrontal cortex (BA 30, 23, 24, 32, 25, 11). The strongest correlate of gray matter volume in elderly schizophrenia patients, although nonsignificant, was the positive symptom subscale of the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale, mapping to the right anterior cingulate area (r = .42, p = .06). CONCLUSIONS: The orbitofrontal/cingulate region had low gray matter volume in elderly schizophrenia patients. Neither cognitive impairment nor psychiatric symptoms were significantly associated with structural differences, even if positive symptoms tended to be associated with increased gray matter volume in this area.
Resumo:
Small vessel pathology and microvascular lesions are no longer considered as minor players in the fields of cognitive impairment and mood regulation. Although frequently found in cognitively intact elders, both neuroimaging and neuropathological data revealed the negative impact on cognitive performances of their presence within neocortical association areas, thalamus and basal ganglia. Unlike cognition, the relationship between these lesions and mood dysregulation is still a matter of intense debate. Early studies focusing on the role of macroinfarct location in the occurrence of post-stroke depression (PSD) led to conflicting data. Later on, the concept of vascular depression proposed a deleterious effect of subcortical lacunes and deep white matter demyelination on mood regulation in elders who experienced the first depressive episode. More recently, the chronic accumulation of lacunes in thalamus, basal ganglia and deep white matter has been considered as a strong correlate of PSD. We provide here a critical overview of neuroimaging and neuropathological sets of evidence regarding the affective repercussions of vascular burden in the aging brain and discuss their conceptual and methodological limitations. Based on these observations, we propose that the accumulation of small vascular and microvascular lesions constitutes a common neuropathological platform for both cognitive decline and depressive episodes in old age.
Resumo:
The prevalence of obesity is rising progressively, even among older age groups. By the year 2030-2035 over 20% of the adult US population and over 25% of the Europeans will be aged 65 years and older. The predicted prevalence of obesity in Americans, 60 years and older was 37% in 2010. The predicted prevalence of obesity in Europe in 2015 varies between 20 and 30% dependent on the model used. This means 20.9 million obese 60+ people in the USA in 2010 and 32 million obese elders in 2015 in the EU. Although cut-off values of BMI, waist circumference and percentages of fat mass have not been defined for the elderly (nor for the elderly of different ethnicity), it is clear from several meta-analyses that mortality and morbidity associated with overweight and obesity only increases at a BMI above 30 kg/m(2). Thus, treatment should only be offered to patients who are obese rather than overweight and who also have functional impairments, metabolic complications or obesity-related diseases, that can benefit from weight loss. The weight loss therapy should aim to minimize muscle and bone loss but also vigilance as regards the development of sarcopenic obesity - a combination of an unhealthy excess of body fat with a detrimental loss of muscle and fat-free mass including bone - is important in the elderly, who are vulnerable to this outcome. Life-style intervention should be the first step and consists of a diet with a 500 kcal (2.1 MJ) energy deficit and an adequate intake of protein of high biological quality together with calcium and vitamin D, behavioural therapy and multi-component exercise. Multi-component exercise includes flexibility training, balance training, aerobic exercise and resistance training. The adherence rate in most studies is around 75%. Knowledge of constraints and modulators of physical inactivity should be of help to engage the elderly in physical activity. The role of pharmacotherapy and bariatric surgery in the elderly is largely unknown as in most studies people aged 65 years and older have been excluded.
Resumo:
Dans une société du consentement, chacun devrait pouvoir exprimer sa voix. Mais tout enfant apprend à parler en faisant usage de la parole des autres. Dans quelle mesure ce que dit le nouveau venu n'est-il pas une pure reproduction de ce que disent ses aînés ? Si chacun a la voix de sa communauté, qu'est-ce que peut bien vouloir dire « liberté d'expression » ? J'aimerais montrer qu'une voix n'est pas quelque chose que l'on a, mais quelque chose que l'on fait entendre au cours d'un apprentissage. Le problème est politique : ma voix est liée à ma place dans une communauté. In a society of consent, each and everyone should express their own voice. However, a child learns how to speak using the words of the others. To which extent the newcomer isn't just reproducing what his elders say ? If everyone speaks through their community's voice, what does « freedom of speech » mean ? I want to demonstrate that a voice isn't something that one has, it's something that one acquires through education. This is a political problem : my voice is linked to my place in a community.
Resumo:
Previous functional imaging studies have pointed to the compensatory recruitment of cortical circuits in old age in order to counterbalance the loss of neural efficiency and preserve cognitive performance. Recent electroencephalographic (EEG) analyses reported age-related deficits in the amplitude of an early positive-negative working memory (PN(wm)) component as well as changes in working memory (WM)-load related brain oscillations during the successful performance of the n-back task. To explore the age-related differences of EEG activation in the face of increasing WM demands, we assessed the PN(wm) component area, parietal alpha event-related synchronization (ERS) as well as frontal theta ERS in 32 young and 32 elderly healthy individuals who successfully performed a highly WM demanding 3-back task. PN(wm) area increased with higher memory loads (3- and 2-back > 0-back tasks) in younger subjects. Older subjects reached the maximal values for this EEG parameter during the less WM demanding 0-back task. They showed a rapid development of an alpha ERS that reached its maximal amplitude at around 800 ms after stimulus onset. In younger subjects, the late alpha ERS occurred between 1,200 and 2,000 ms and its amplitude was significantly higher compared with elders. Frontal theta ERS culmination peak decreased in a task-independent manner in older compared with younger cases. Only in younger individuals, there was a significant decrease in the phasic frontal theta ERS amplitude in the 2- and 3-back tasks compared with the detection and 0-back tasks. These observations suggest that older adults display a rapid mobilization of their neural generators within the parietal cortex to manage very low demanding WM tasks. Moreover, they are less able to activate frontal theta generators during attentional tasks compared with younger persons.
Resumo:
Contexte: Le désir de hâter la survenue de leur mort (DM)¦exprimé par certains patients est souvent vécu difficilement¦par les soignants. Le débat actuel sur le¦suicide assisté et l'euthanasie met en lumière cette¦problématique encore peu explorée. Le but de cette¦revue est d'identifier la prévalence du DM et les¦facteurs associés à ce désir.¦Méthode: Une revue de littérature a été conduite jusqu'en¦septembre 2010 en utilisant les termes : « Wish to¦die/to hasten death - Desire to hasten death/for¦death/for early death - Request for assistance in¦dying - Assisted suicide - Euthanasia » et « Advanced/¦terminal illness - Chronic illness/disease ». Seules les¦études cliniques menées auprès de patients ont été¦sélectionnées.¦Résultats: 55 études ont été identifiées, dont 13 de type qualitatif¦: 63% d'entre elles portaient sur des patients¦atteints de cancer, 22% de maladies de diverses origines,¦9% d'VIH et 6% de sclérose latérale amyotrophique.¦Seulement 9% portaient spécifiquement sur¦des patients gériatriques. La définition du DM était¦très variable d'une étude à l'autre, allant du désir de¦mourir à un souhait de hâter la survenue de la mort,¦voire à une demande explicite d'assistance au suicide¦ou d'euthanasie. La prévalence du DM variait¦de 2 à 22% selon la définition utilisée et la population¦étudiée. Les facteurs les plus fréquemment associés¦au DM étaient la dépression, le désespoir, la perte¦de sens, de dignité et le sentiment d'être une charge.¦Les symptômes physiques et les autres dimensions¦psychosociales ne paraissaient jouer qu'un rôle indirect.¦Une instabilité temporelle du DM était rapportée¦par neuf travaux, notamment lors de dépression.¦Discussion: L'hétérogénéité de ces études ne permet pas de¦conclure sur la prévalence des différentes expressions¦du DM. Par ailleurs, même si certains facteurs¦semblent associés au DM, de nouvelles études sont¦nécessaires pour mieux comprendre la chronologie¦de son développement.¦Perspectives: Des études prospectives, utilisant notamment une¦approche mixte, qualitative et quantitative, sont nécessaires. Elles devraient explorer non seulement les facteurs de risque mais également les facteurs « protecteurs » du DM. Sur cette base, un modèle conceptuel pourrait être défini et utilisé ensuite pour développer des interventions spécifiques dans l'objectif d'améliorer la prise en charge des patients exprimant un tel désir.¦Références: 1. Hudson PL, Kristjanson LJ, Ashby M, et al. Desire for hastened death in patients with advanced disease and the evidence base of clinical¦guidelines : a systematic review. Palliat Med 2006;20:693-701.¦2. Schroepfer TA. Mind frames towards dying and factors motivating their adoption by terminally ill elders. J Gerontol 2006;61:S129-S139.¦3. Rodin G, Lo C, Mikulincer M, Donner A, Gagliese L, Zimmermann C.¦Pathways to distress : the multiple determinants of depression, hopelessness, and the desire for hastened death in metastatic cancer¦patients. Soc Sci Med 2009;68:562-9.
Resumo:
Trabecular bone score (TBS) is a gray-level textural index of bone microarchitecture derived from lumbar spine dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) images. TBS is a bone mineral density (BMD)-independent predictor of fracture risk. The objective of this meta-analysis was to determine whether TBS predicted fracture risk independently of FRAX probability and to examine their combined performance by adjusting the FRAX probability for TBS. We utilized individual-level data from 17,809 men and women in 14 prospective population-based cohorts. Baseline evaluation included TBS and the FRAX risk variables, and outcomes during follow-up (mean 6.7 years) comprised major osteoporotic fractures. The association between TBS, FRAX probabilities, and the risk of fracture was examined using an extension of the Poisson regression model in each cohort and for each sex and expressed as the gradient of risk (GR; hazard ratio per 1 SD change in risk variable in direction of increased risk). FRAX probabilities were adjusted for TBS using an adjustment factor derived from an independent cohort (the Manitoba Bone Density Cohort). Overall, the GR of TBS for major osteoporotic fracture was 1.44 (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.35-1.53) when adjusted for age and time since baseline and was similar in men and women (p > 0.10). When additionally adjusted for FRAX 10-year probability of major osteoporotic fracture, TBS remained a significant, independent predictor for fracture (GR = 1.32, 95% CI 1.24-1.41). The adjustment of FRAX probability for TBS resulted in a small increase in the GR (1.76, 95% CI 1.65-1.87 versus 1.70, 95% CI 1.60-1.81). A smaller change in GR for hip fracture was observed (FRAX hip fracture probability GR 2.25 vs. 2.22). TBS is a significant predictor of fracture risk independently of FRAX. The findings support the use of TBS as a potential adjustment for FRAX probability, though the impact of the adjustment remains to be determined in the context of clinical assessment guidelines. © 2015 American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.