Prevalence of mild behavioural impairment domains: a meta‐analysis
Autor: | Leung-Wing Chu, Patrick K C Chiu, Yining Pan, Zahinoor Ismail, Henry K.F. Mak, You-Qiang Song, Yat Fung Shea |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
medicine.medical_specialty
business.industry Significant difference Cognition medicine.disease Abnormal perception Psychiatry and Mental health Internal medicine Meta-analysis Affective dysregulation Prevalence medicine Humans Cognitive deterioration Cognitive Dysfunction Geriatrics and Gerontology Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) Cognition Disorders Cognitive impairment business Gerontology |
Zdroj: | Psychogeriatrics. 22:84-98 |
ISSN: | 1479-8301 1346-3500 |
DOI: | 10.1111/psyg.12782 |
Popis: | BACKGROUND Mild behavioural impairment (MBI) is a neurobehavioural syndrome characterised by later life emergence of persistent neuropsychiatric symptoms. Our previous meta-analysis showed that MBI is prevalent among cognitively normal (CN), subjective cognitive impairment (SCI) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) subjects. This study is to calculate the pooled prevalence of MBI domains among CN, SCI, and MCI subjects. METHODS A search of relevant literature published between 1 January 2003 and 6 August 2021 was conducted. Meta-analysis using a random effects model and meta-regression was performed. RESULTS Ten studies conducted among 12 067 subjects (9758 CN, 1057 SCI and 1252 MCI) with retrievable MBI domains data underwent meta-analysis, revealing pooled prevalence of affective dysregulation (AFD), impulse dyscontrol (IDS), decreased motivation (DMT), social inappropriateness (SIP) and abnormal perception/thought (APT) of 32.84% (95% CI 24.44-42.5%), 26.67% (95% CI 18.24-37.23%), 12.58% (95% CI 6.93-21.75%), 6.05% (95% CI 3.44-10.42%), and 2.81% (95% CI 1.67-4.69%) respectively. AFD and APT domains demonstrated ordinal increase in pooled prevalence from CN, SCI and MCI subgroups, but meta-regression demonstrated no significant difference in MBI domains prevalence among cognitive subgroups (in contrast to the significant increase in MBI prevalence from CN to SCI to MCI). The pooled prevalence of AFD and IDS are greater than that of DMT, SIP and APT among all cognitive subgroups. Several variables were found to explain the high heterogeneity. CONCLUSIONS AFD and IDS are the two most prevalent MBI domains and remain the same with cognitive deterioration. This finding is potentially relevant to clinical practice. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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