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    Título
    Education and Literacy as Risk Factors of Dementia after Stroke and Transient Ischemic Attack: NEDICES Study.
    Autor(es)
    Contador Castillo, IsraelAutoridad USAL ORCID
    Alzola, Patricia
    Bermejo Pareja, Félix
    Ser, Teodoro del
    Llamas Velasco, Sara
    Fernández Calvo, Bernardino
    Benito León, Julián
    Palabras clave
    Cognitive reserve
    Illiteracy
    Low education
    Stroke
    Transient ischemic attack
    Fecha de publicación
    2022-06-28
    Editor
    IOS Press
    Citación
    Contador, I., Alzola, P., Bermejo-Pareja, F., Del Ser, T., Llamas-Velasco, S., Fernández-Calvo, B., & Benito-León, J. (2022). Education and Literacy as Risk Factors of Dementia after Stroke and Transient Ischemic Attack: NEDICES Study. Journal of Alzheimer's Disease : JAD, 88(1), 291–299.
    Resumen
    [EN]Background:A protective effect of education on cognitive decline after stroke has been claimed, but evidence from prospective population-based cohorts is very limited. The differential role of literacy and education on dementia after stroke remains unexplored. Objective:This research addresses the role of education and literacy in dementia incidence after stroke and transient ischemic attack (TIA). Methods:131 participants with stroke or TIA were identified within the population-based NEDICES study (N = 5,278 persons). Participants were fully assessed at baseline (1994–1995) and incident dementia diagnosis was made by expert neurologists (DSM-IV criteria) after a mean follow-up of 3.4 years. Adjusted Cox regression analyses were applied to test the association between education, literacy, and dementia risk. Results:Within the 131 subjects with stroke or TIA, 19 (14%) developed dementia at follow-up. The Cox’s regression model (age and sex adjusted) showed that low education (HR = 3.48, 95% CI = 1.28, 9.42, p = 0.014) and literacy (HR = 3.16, 95% CI = 1.08, 9.22, p = 0.035) were significantly associated with a higher dementia risk. Low education was also associated with dementia when main confounders (i.e., cognitive/functional performance) were considered in the Cox’s model. However, after including stroke recurrence, only low/null literacy (versus education) remained as significant predictor of dementia. Finally, low/null literacy showed an effect over-and-above education on dementia risk when both factors were introduced in the adjusted Cox’s regression. Conclusion:These findings underline the importance of literacy to estimate cognitive decline after stroke in low-educated populations.
    URI
    https://hdl.handle.net/10366/154172
    ISSN
    1875-8908
    DOI
    10.3233/JAD-220109
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