Long-term patterns of depressive symptoms and cognitive aging in middle-aged and older adults - PubMed
3 hours ago
- #Longitudinal Study
- #Depressive Symptoms
- #Cognitive Aging
- The study analyzes 7,211 participants from CHARLS to examine the link between long-term depressive symptom patterns and cognitive aging in middle-aged and older adults.
- Depressive symptoms were categorized into four patterns: never depressed, early-remission, late-onset, and persistent/recurrent, based on CES-D-10 scores from 2011 to 2015.
- Late-onset and persistent/recurrent depressive symptom patterns were associated with lower episodic memory and orientation in 2018, while early-remission showed weaker links.
- Associations were stronger among women and individuals with lower educational attainment.
- An exploratory pathway analysis suggests that lower grip strength and greater sleep disturbance partly explain (16.9%) the association between persistent/recurrent depressive symptoms and episodic memory.
- Directional analyses indicate a bidirectional relationship between depressive symptoms and episodic memory, and findings were externally validated using HRS data.
- The study emphasizes the importance of long-term monitoring of depressive symptom patterns, along with attention to physical function and sleep health, to identify those at higher risk of cognitive decline.