AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to estimate the prevalence of dementia and understand its causes in a community sample from São Paulo, Brazil.
  • Involving subjects over 60, the research diagnosed dementia in 6.8% of participants, with Alzheimer's disease being the most common cause, followed by vascular dementia.
  • The findings suggest a higher prevalence of dementia in Brazil than previously thought, highlighting the need for further studies to assess the impact on health services in the region.

Article Abstract

Aims: To estimate dementia prevalence and describe the etiology of dementia in a community sample from the city of São Paulo, Brazil.

Methods: A sample of subjects older than 60 years was screened for dementia in the first phase. During the second phase, the diagnostic workup included a structured interview, physical and neurological examination, laboratory exams, a brain scan, and DSM-IV criteria diagnosis.

Results: Mean age was 71.5 years (n = 1,563) and 58.3% had up to 4 years of schooling (68.7% female). Dementia was diagnosed in 107 subjects with an observed prevalence of 6.8%. The estimate of dementia prevalence was 12.9%, considering design effect, nonresponse during the community phase, and positive and negative predictive values. Alzheimer's disease was the most frequent cause of dementia (59.8%), followed by vascular dementia (15.9%). Older age and illiteracy were significantly associated with dementia.

Conclusions: The estimate of dementia prevalence was higher than previously reported in Brazil, with Alzheimer's disease and vascular dementia being the most frequent causes of dementia. Dementia prevalence in Brazil and in other Latin American countries should be addressed by additional studies to confirm these higher dementia rates which might have a sizable impact on countries' health services.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000161053DOI Listing

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