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. 2022 Oct 27;12(1):18033.
doi: 10.1038/s41598-022-22785-x.

Dementia and risk of visual impairment in Chinese older adults

Affiliations

Dementia and risk of visual impairment in Chinese older adults

Charlotte P C Kwok et al. Sci Rep. .

Abstract

We had previously identified visual impairment increasing risk of incident dementia. While a bi-directional vision-cognition association has subsequently been proposed, no study has specifically examined the longitudinal association between dementia and incidence of clinically defined visual impairment. In this territory-wide community cohort study of 10,806 visually unimpaired older adults, we examined their visual acuity annually for 6 years and tested if dementia at baseline was independently associated with higher risk of incident visual impairment (LogMAR ≥ 0.50 in the better eye despite best correction, which is equivalent to moderate visual impairment according to the World Health Organization definition). By the end of Year 6, a total of 3151 (29.2%) participants developed visual impairment. However, we did not find baseline dementia associating with higher risk of incident visual impairment, after controlling for baseline visual acuity, cataract, glaucoma, diabetes, hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, heart diseases, stroke, Parkinson's disease, depression, hearing and physical impairments, physical, intellectual and social activities, diet, smoking, age, sex, educational level, and socioeconomic status. Among different covariables, baseline visual acuity appears to be more important than dementia in contributing to the development of visual impairment. Our present findings highlight the need for re-evaluating whether dementia is indeed a risk factor for visual impairment.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no competing interests.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
A Kaplan–Meier curve illustrating visual impairment-free survival over 6 years.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Differences between dementia and dementia-free groups in terms of the distribution of time till visual impairment (the event) occurred.

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