Is your doctor treating and preventing your MCI post-stroke? What is the protocol?
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25514304
Abstract
IMPORTANCE:
Cognitive
decline is a common and feared aspect of aging. Mild cognitive
impairment (MCI) is defined as the symptomatic predementia stage on the
continuum of cognitive decline, characterized by objective impairment in
cognition that is not severe enough to require help with usual
activities of daily living.
OBJECTIVE:
To
present evidence on the diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis of MCI and
to provide physicians with an evidence-based framework for caring for
older patients with MCI and their caregivers.
EVIDENCE ACQUISITION:
We
searched PubMed for English-language articles in peer-reviewed journals
and the Cochrane Library database from inception through July 2014.
Relevant references from retrieved articles were also evaluated.
FINDINGS:
The
prevalence of MCI in adults aged 65 years and older is 10% to 20%; risk
increases with age and men appear to be at higher risk than women. In
older patients with MCI, clinicians should consider depression,
polypharmacy, and uncontrolled cardiovascular risk factors, all of which
may increase risk for cognitive impairment and other negative outcomes.
Currently, no medications have proven effective for MCI; treatments and
interventions should be aimed at reducing cardiovascular risk factors
and prevention of stroke. Aerobic exercise, mental activity, and social
engagement may help decrease risk of further cognitive decline. Although
patients with MCI are at greater risk for developing dementia compared
with the general population, there is currently substantial variation in
risk estimates (from <5% to 20% annual conversion rates), depending
on the population studied. Current research targets improving early
detection and treatment of MCI, particularly in patients at high risk
for progression to dementia.
CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE:
Cognitive
decline and MCI have important implications for patients and their
families and will require that primary care clinicians be skilled in
identifying and managing this common disorder as the number of older
adults increases in coming decades. Current evidence supports aerobic
exercise, mental activity, and cardiovascular risk factor control in
patients with MCI.
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