First Analysis of Mild Behavioral Impairment in a Sample of Mexican Older Adults
Ángela Acosta-Amaya, Salvador Sánchez-Badajos, David J. Dávila-Ortiz de Montellano, Alberto Ortega-Vázquez, Ramiro Ruiz-Garcia, Nancy Monroy-Jaramillo, Yaneth Rodríguez-Agudelo

TL;DR
This study explores mild behavioral impairment in Mexican older adults and its link to cognitive decline and dementia risk.
Contribution
The first analysis of MBI in Mexican-Mestizos older adults and its association with APOEε4 and cognitive decline.
Findings
37% of participants met MBI criteria, with APOEε4 homozygosity linked to two MBI subdomains.
Subjective cognitive complaints and depression symptoms increased MBI risk (ORs 4.7–15.89).
PCA showed MBI checklist scores contributed significantly to variance in cognitive decline risk factors.
Abstract
Mild behavioral impairment (MBI) constitutes a late-life transition state that is associated with an increased risk of cognitive impairment and dementia. Herein, we cross-sectionally describe the MBI construct and its relationship with cognitive status in Mexican-Mestizos (MM) older adults. Participants were classified according to their cognitive and behavioral statuses using tests administered to older adults and their informants. APOE_rs429358/rs7412 variants were genotyped by real-time PCR. Multivariate correlation and Principal Components Analysis (PCA) were used in statistical analysis. A total of 246 participants were included, 56.1% were classified as individuals with NC, 13.0% had subjective cognitive decline, and 30.9% had mild cognitive impairment. A total of 37% (91/246) of participants from all over the cognitive spectrum met the MBI criteria; among this group, APOEε4…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Alzheimer's disease research and treatments · Genetic Associations and Epidemiology
