AI Article Synopsis

  • The study highlights the importance of addressing mild cognitive impairment (MCI) as it may serve as a precursor to dementia, suggesting that dietary habits and bowel regularity could be key areas for intervention.
  • Frequent fruit consumption and regular bowel movements were found to have a negative association with MCI, while medical issues like hypertension and stroke were identified as risk factors.
  • The research proposes five causal paths to MCI, emphasizing the significant impact of lifestyle factors on cognitive health among the elderly in Singapore.

Article Abstract

Mild cognitive impairment (MCI), as a preclinical phase of dementia, provides an invaluable time window for intervention. Besides several proposed modifiable risk factors, the associations of MCI with dietary habits and bowel movement are not well clarified. We thus conducted a cross-sectional study of community-living Singapore elderly and focused on the relationship of clinically diagnosed MCI with dietary habits and bowel movement frequencies. The multiple logistic regression results showed that frequent (≥4 days per week) fruit consumption ( = 0.004), active (≥4 days per week) bowel movement within 10 minutes ( = 0.027), and years of schooling were negatively associated with MCI occurrence. In contrast, medical comorbidities including hypertension, stroke, and cataract/glaucoma were found to be risk factors. Furthermore, a Bayesian network model of causal inference detected five hypothesized causal-association paths leading to MCI, namely bowel movement, stroke, years of schooling via fruit consumption, hypertension via stroke and hypertension via cataract/glaucoma. The combination of the two direct factors (inactive bowel movement and stroke) reached a maximum conditional probability of 60.00% for MCI occurrence. Taken together, this study was the first to link bowel movement with MCI occurrence. In addition, it suggested five modifiable hypothesized causal-association paths to MCI.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7521501PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/aging.103674DOI Listing

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