Disease | heart disease |
Phenotype | C0497327|dementia |
Sentences | 5 |
PubMedID- 21387018 | dementia and depression with ischemic heart disease: a population-based longitudinal study comparing interventional approaches to medical management. |
PubMedID- 22171356 | The meta-analysis (pendlebury and rothwell, 2009a) reported that neither hypertension nor previous ischaemic heart disease was associated with post-stroke dementia, although recurrent strokes were. |
PubMedID- 22540409 | It is now well-recognized that many of the same risk factors that cause heart disease also can lead to vascular dementia in the elderly [56] and microvascular brain damage – the result of age-associated alteration in large arteries and the progressive mismatch of their cross-talk with small cerebral arteries – a potent risk factor for cognitive decline and the onset of dementia in older individuals [57]. |
PubMedID- 26076825 | This group was also more cognitively impaired; baseline data are displayed in table 1.table 1baseline datacharacteristicno ct scan n = 106ct scan n = 94p valueage83.8 (8.3)83.0 (8.0)0.46female sex63 %67 %0.66intervention in original study55 %44 %0.12living alone62 %72 %0.14ischemic heart disease38 %29 %0.23heart failure30 %26 %0.53hypertension42 %56 %0.047copd24 %15 %0.15stroke/tia10 %31 %<0.001diabetes22 %25 %0.74cancer, nonskin26 %31 %0.43diagnosed with dementia or mci6 %10 %0.42charlson comorbidity index2.2 (1.4)2.3 (1.6)0.70mmse23.9 (3.7)21.6 (4.4)<0.001cdt3.8 (1.1)3.0 (1.2)<0.001all data are presented as mean (sd) or percentages. |
PubMedID- 24015222 | Moreover, recent reports have shown the costs with dementia surpassing those of heart disease and cancer [3]. |
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