Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine (Sep 2022)

Education level may modify the association between cardiac index and cognitive function among elders with normal ejection function

  • Hao-Min Cheng,
  • Hao-Min Cheng,
  • Shao-Yuan Chuang,
  • Yu-Ting Ko,
  • Chao-Feng Liao,
  • Wen-Harn Pan,
  • Wen-Ling Liu,
  • Chen-Ying Hung,
  • Chen-Huan Chen,
  • Chen-Huan Chen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2022.844396
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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BackgroundLower cardiac index (CI) in elders has been associated with incident dementia, and higher CI has protectively effect with brain aging. In the present study, we investigated the modulating effects of education level and arterial stiffness on the association between CI and cognitive function among older adults.MethodsA total of 723 elders (≥60 years, 50.1% women) with normal left ventricular ejection fraction (≥50%) were identified from the Cardiovascular Diseases Risk Factor Two-Township Study. CI was calculated from the Doppler-derived stroke volume. We evaluated arterial stiffness by measuring carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (CFPWV) and global cognitive function by using the Mini-Mental Short Examination (MMSE). Education level was determined by years of formal education.ResultsIn linear regression analysis adjusting for age, sex, formal years of education, and CFPWV, CI was significantly positively associated with MMSE (BETA=0.344±0.130, P = 0.0082). In logistic regression analysis adjusting for age, sex, formal years of education, and CFPWV, subjects with a CI≥75 percentile had a significantly lower risk of low MMSE (<26) (OR = 0.495, 95% CI = 0.274–0.896, P = 0.02). In subgroup analysis, higher CI was significantly associated with higher MMSE and lower risk of low MMSE only in elders with ≤ 9 years of formal education. Causal mediation analysis suggests that higher CI maintains higher MMSE in elders with lower education levels whereas higher CFPWV causes lower MMSE in all the elders.ConclusionIn elders with normal ejection fraction, a higher CI was associated with a lower risk of cognitive function impairment, independent of arterial stiffness, mainly in subjects with a lower education level and possibly a smaller cognitive reserve.

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