PLoS ONE (Jan 2016)

Relations between Recent Past Leisure Activities with Risks of Dementia and Cognitive Functions after Stroke.

  • Adrian Wong,
  • Alexander Y L Lau,
  • Eugene Lo,
  • Michael Tang,
  • Zhaolu Wang,
  • Wenyan Liu,
  • Nicole Tanner,
  • Natalie Chau,
  • Lorraine Law,
  • Lin Shi,
  • Winnie C W Chu,
  • Jie Yang,
  • Yun-Yun Xiong,
  • Bonnie Y K Lam,
  • Lisa Au,
  • Anne Y Y Chan,
  • Yannie Soo,
  • Thomas W H Leung,
  • Lawrence K S Wong,
  • Linda C W Lam,
  • Vincent C T Mok

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0159952
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 7
p. e0159952

Abstract

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Leisure activity participation has been shown to lower risks of cognitive decline in non-stroke populations. However, effects of leisure activities participation upon cognitive functions and risk of dementia after stroke are unclear. The purpose of this study is to examine the effects of recent past leisure activities participation upon cognitive functions and risk of incident dementia after stroke.Hospital-based, retrospective cohort study. 88 of 1,013 patients with stroke or TIA having no prestroke dementia were diagnosed to have incident poststroke dementia (PSD) 3-6 months after stroke. Regular participation (≥3 times per week) in intellectual, recreational, social and physical activities over the year before the index stroke was retrospectively recorded at 3-6 months after stroke.Logistic regression analyses showed that regular participation in intellectual (RR 0.36, 95%CI 0.20-0.63) and stretching & toning physical exercise (0.37, 0.21-0.64) was significantly associated with a reduced risk of PSD after controlling for age, education, prestroke cognitive decline, stroke subtype, prior strokes and chronic brain changes including white matter changes, old infarcts and global atrophy. Results were similar in patients with past strokes in unadjusted models. Participation in increased number of activities in general (r = 0.41, p<0.01) and in intellectual (r = 0.40, p<0.01), recreational (r = 0.24, p<0.01), strenuous aerobic (r = 0.23, p<0.01) and mind-body (r = 0.10, p<0.01) activities was associated with higher poststroke Mini-mental State Examination scores in models adjusted for prestroke cognitive decline.Regular participation in intellectual activities and stretching & toning exercise was associated with a significantly reduced short-term risk of PSD in patients with and without recurrent strokes. Participation in greater number of recent past leisure activities was associated with better poststroke cognitive performance. Findings of this retrospective cohort study call for studies of activity intervention for prevention of cognitive decline in individuals at elevated risk of stroke.