Jacobsseerup3005
On the contrary, antipsychotics should only be used in patients with severe distressing symptoms and whose behavior means their safety or the safety of those around them is compromised, given the harmful of these medications in patients with pre-existing dementia. CONCLUSIONS It is essential to improve health care providers knowledge on DSD to improve the quality of care for an epidemiologically relevant though understudied population.PURPOSE It remains unclear, how much older persons' sleep problems are due to age-related changes in sleep architecture and pattern, or whether they are a consequence of health problems. This work aimed to examine the association between sleep characteristics and self-rated health, taking into account potential confounders. METHODS Data about sleep, including sleep efficiency (ratio of sleep duration to the amount of time spent in bed, considered as good if > 85%), as well as health-rated characteristics were self-reported by community-dwelling persons enrolled in the Lausanne cohort 65+ study (n = 2712, age 66-75 years). Participants' subjective health was categorized as good versus poor. The cross-sectional association between good self-rated health and sleep characteristics was examined in bivariate and multivariate analysis. RESULTS The majority of participants (68.4%) rated their health as good. Compared to the participants with poor-rated health, they more often reported a good sleep efficiency (59.5% vs 45.0%, p less then 0.001) and less often reported napping (41.6% vs 54.0%, p less then 0.001) as well as using sleep medication (12.7% vs 31.8%, p less then 0.001). After adjustment for comorbidity, depressive symptoms and cognitive difficulties, a positive association persisted between good sleep efficiency and good self-rated health (adjOR 1.35, 95% CI 1.10-1.66). Regular napping remained negatively associated to feel healthy (adjOR 0.65, 95% CI 0.53-0.79). CONCLUSION Sleep efficiency is positively associated with subjective health, whereas napping and use of sleep medication are negatively associated to rating own health as good. These associations need to be further investigated in longitudinal analyses to better understand causality.PURPOSE To investigate characteristics of dysphagia in the oldest-old population and the effect of aging on swallowing physiology. METHODS 418 (364 men, 54 women) patients who underwent videofluoroscopic swallow study (VFSS) for dysphagia were included. The patients were divided into an older group, group I (60-79 years old, n = 275) and the oldest-old group, group II (80-96 years old, n = 143). Sex, cognition, duration of symptoms, BMI (body mass index), frailty index derived from comprehensive geriatric assessment (FI-CGA), penetration aspiration scale (PAS), and videofluoroscopic dysphagia scale (VDS) scores and the etiologies of dysphagia were compared between the groups. The correlation analysis of BMI and FI-CGA with dysphagia severity and age was performed. RESULTS The proportion of males, K-MMSE scores, the duration of symptoms, BMI scores and FI-CGA were significantly greater in group I than II. The PAS and VDS scores were significantly higher in group II than I. The proportion of CNS disorders was significantly higher in group I than in group II. The proportion of poor general medical condition was significantly higher in group II than in group I. A negative correlation between BMI and dysphagia severity and a positive correlation between FI-CGA and dysphagia severity were observed. CONCLUSION Dysphagia tends to be more severe in the oldest-old, and can be caused by health conditions unrelated to swallowing. Malnutrition and frailty correlated positively with dysphagia severity, irrespective of age.PURPOSE Geriatric patients with low skeletal muscle mass (SMM) and strength have a poor clinical outcome following acute illness. Consequently, it is recommended to assess SMM and strength in patients admitted to the acute care geriatric ward. Bio-impedance analysis (BIA) is a practical tool to assess SMM in hospitalized patients. However, the reproducibility of this assessment may be compromised due to changing clinical conditions. The objective was to study the reproducibility of SMM assessment using multifrequency BIA (mf-BIA) in acutely ill geriatric patients. METHODS A total of 47 geriatric patients (age 83 ± 7 years; n = 31 female) admitted to the acute geriatric ward participated in this pilot study. SMM was assessed on three occasions within the first week of hospital admission using the Maltron Bioscan-920-II. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/vtp50469.html RESULTS Total skeletal SMM averaged 21.4 ± 5.7, 20.7 ± 5.4, and 20.8 ± 5.1 kg assessed at 2 ± 1, 3 ± 1 and 5 ± 2 days after hospital admission, respectively. Coefficient of variation (COV) of the three SMM measurements was 4.9 ± 4.5% with an intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) of 0.976 (CI 95% 0.961-0.986; P less then 0.001). Hydration status affected the reproducibility of the measurement, with non-euvolemic patients (n = 16) showing a significantly higher COV (7.6 ± 5.9% vs 3.5 ± 2.9%; P less then 0.01) and a lower ICC (0.983 vs 0.913; P less then 0.001) when compared to the euvolemic patients (n = 31). CONCLUSION Mf-BIA seems a highly reproducible and reliable method to assess SMM throughout the first week of hospitalization in geriatric patients. However, since abnormal hydration status may compromise reliability of the measurement, assessment of SMM using mf-BIA may better be performed when euvolemic status has been established.PURPOSE Aging is associated with increased needs related to complex decisions, particularly in medical and social issues. However, the complexity of decision-making involves many neurological functions and structures which are potentially altered by cognitive aging. METHODOLOGY A systematic review was conducted in accordance with PRISMA guidelines to examine changes in decision-making occurring in normal cognitive aging. The keywords "decision making" and "normal aging" were used to find the clinical studies and literature reviews focused on these changes. RESULTS A total of 97 articles were considered in the review, and ultimately 40 articles were selected, including 30 studies and 10 literature reviews. The data from these studies were of uneven quality and too disparate to allow meta-analysis according to PRISMA criteria. Nevertheless, a key result of the analysis is the decrease of processing speed with aging. In ambiguous decision-making situations, the alteration of the ventromedial system is associated with changes in motivation profiles.