• Title of article

    Social and biological determinants of cognitive aging Pages 17-20 Eric J. Brunner Close Close preview | Purchase PDF (127 K) | Related articles | Related reference work articles AbstractAbstract | Figures/TablesFigures/Tables | ReferencesRefere

  • Author/Authors

    Eric J. Brunner، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
  • Pages
    4
  • From page
    17
  • To page
    20
  • Abstract
    The aging of populations increases the importance of cognitive function as a public health issue. The Whitehall II study is investigating influences on aging processes within social context, with tests in five domains of cognitive function (short-term memory, inductive reasoning, vocabulary, phonemic and semantic fluency). The tests have now been completed three times over a 10-year period, by participants initially aged 40–60 years. In mid-life, socioeconomic differences in cognitive function were large, while APOE genotype had little influence. Higher occupational status was strongly related to lower metabolic syndrome prevalence. This social-biological gradient illustrates that potential confounding of psychosocial, behavioral and biological effects on cognitive decline is an important consideration in etiologic research. Additionally, it highlights the importance for population health of the ‘causes of the causes’ of cognitive aging. Epidemiology contributes to our understanding of risk and protective factors for cognitive decline by showing the links between the wider determinants of health and biological markers such as glucose intolerance and the metabolic syndrome.
  • Keywords
    Epidemiology , socioeconomic factors , metabolic syndrome , Cognitive ability , glucose intolerance , Apolipoprotein E gene
  • Journal title
    Neurobiology of Aging
  • Serial Year
    2005
  • Journal title
    Neurobiology of Aging
  • Record number

    820527