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Depression as a risk factor or prodromal feature for dementia? Findings in a population-based sample of Swedish twins

Authors

Brommelhoff, Jessica A., Gatz, Margaret, Johansson, Boo, McArdle, John J., Fratiglioni, Laura, Pedersen, Nancy L.

Journal

Psychology And Aging, Volume: 24, No.: 2, Pages.: 373-384

Year of Publication

2009

Abstract

This study tested whether history of depression is associated with an increased likelihood of dementia, and whether a first depressive episode earlier in life is associated with increased dementia risk, or whether only depressive episodes close in time to dementia onset are related to dementia. Depression information came from national hospital discharge registries, medical history, and medical records. Dementia was diagnosed clinically. In case-control results, individuals with recent registry-identified depression were 3.9 times more likely than those with no registry-identified depression history to have dementia, whereas registry-identified depression earlier in life was not associated with dementia risk. Each 1-year increase in time between depression onset and dementia onset or equivalent age decreased the likelihood of dementia by 8.4%. In co-twin control analyses, twins with prior depression were 3.0 times more likely to have dementia than their nondepressed twin partners, with a similar age of depression gradient. These findings suggest that after partially controlling for genetic influences, late-life depression for many individuals may be a prodrome rather than a risk factor for dementia.; (c) 2009 APA, all rights reserved.

Bibtex Citation

@article{Brommelhoff_2009, doi = {10.1037/a0015713}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/a0015713}, year = 2009, publisher = {American Psychological Association ({APA})}, volume = {24}, number = {2}, pages = {373--384}, author = {Jessica A. Brommelhoff and Margaret Gatz and Boo Johansson and John J. McArdle and Laura Fratiglioni and Nancy L. Pedersen}, title = {Depression as a risk factor or prodromal feature for dementia? Findings in a population-based sample of Swedish twins.}, journal = {Psychology and Aging} }

Keywords

age of onset, aged, dementia, depressive disorder major, diagnosis, diseases in twins, epidemiology, female, genetic predisposition to disease, genetics, health status, humans, logistic models, male, prognosis, questionnaires, registries, risk factors, statistics & numerical data, sweden, twins dizygotic, twins monozygotic

Countries of Study

Sweden

Types of Dementia

Dementia (general / unspecified)

Types of Study

Cohort Study, Epidemiological

Type of Outcomes

Cognition

Type of Interventions

Risk Factor Modification

Risk Factor Modifications

General population health promotion