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Understanding exogenous factors and biological mechanisms for cognitive frailty: A multidisciplinary scoping review

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Understanding exogenous factors and biological mechanisms for cognitive frailty: A multidisciplinary scoping review. / Holland, Carol; Dravecz, Nikolett; Owens, Lauren et al.
In: Ageing Research Reviews, Vol. 101, 102461, 30.11.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineReview articlepeer-review

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Holland C, Dravecz N, Owens L, Benedetto A, Dias I, Gow A et al. Understanding exogenous factors and biological mechanisms for cognitive frailty: A multidisciplinary scoping review. Ageing Research Reviews. 2024 Nov 30;101:102461. Epub 2024 Sept 17. doi: 10.1016/j.arr.2024.102461

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Holland, Carol ; Dravecz, Nikolett ; Owens, Lauren et al. / Understanding exogenous factors and biological mechanisms for cognitive frailty : A multidisciplinary scoping review. In: Ageing Research Reviews. 2024 ; Vol. 101.

Bibtex

@article{8d1429a0623f4f49b68f351592cc9db1,
title = "Understanding exogenous factors and biological mechanisms for cognitive frailty: A multidisciplinary scoping review",
abstract = "Cognitive frailty (CF) is the conjunction of cognitive impairment without dementia and physical frailty. While predictors of each element are well-researched, mechanisms of their co-occurrence have not been integrated, particularly in terms of relationships between social, psychological, and biological factors. This interdisciplinary scoping review set out to categorise a heterogenous multidisciplinary literature to identify potential pathways and mechanisms of CF, and research gaps. Studies were included if they used the definition of CF OR focused on conjunction of cognitive impairment and frailty (by any measure), AND excluded studies on specific disease populations, interventions, epidemiology or prediction of mortality. Searches used Web of Science, PubMed and Science Direct. Search terms included “cognitive frailty” OR ((“cognitive decline” OR “cognitive impairment”) AND (frail*)), with terms to elicit mechanisms, predictors, causes, pathways and risk factors. To ensure inclusion of animal and cell models, keywords such as “behavioural” or “cognitive decline” or “senescence”, were added. 206 papers were included. Descriptive analysis provided high-level categorisation of determinants from social and environmental through psychological to biological. Patterns distinguishing CF from Alzheimer's disease were identified and social and psychological moderators and mediators of underlying biological and physiological changes and of trajectories of CF development were suggested as foci for further research.",
keywords = "Ageing mechanisms, Cognitive frailty, Cognitive impairment, Model organisms, Physical frailty, Psychosocial risk factors",
author = "Carol Holland and Nikolett Dravecz and Lauren Owens and Alexandre Benedetto and Irundika Dias and Alan Gow and Susan Broughton",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2024 The Authors",
year = "2024",
month = nov,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1016/j.arr.2024.102461",
language = "English",
volume = "101",
journal = "Ageing Research Reviews",
issn = "1568-1637",
publisher = "Elsevier Ireland Ltd",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Understanding exogenous factors and biological mechanisms for cognitive frailty

T2 - A multidisciplinary scoping review

AU - Holland, Carol

AU - Dravecz, Nikolett

AU - Owens, Lauren

AU - Benedetto, Alexandre

AU - Dias, Irundika

AU - Gow, Alan

AU - Broughton, Susan

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Authors

PY - 2024/11/30

Y1 - 2024/11/30

N2 - Cognitive frailty (CF) is the conjunction of cognitive impairment without dementia and physical frailty. While predictors of each element are well-researched, mechanisms of their co-occurrence have not been integrated, particularly in terms of relationships between social, psychological, and biological factors. This interdisciplinary scoping review set out to categorise a heterogenous multidisciplinary literature to identify potential pathways and mechanisms of CF, and research gaps. Studies were included if they used the definition of CF OR focused on conjunction of cognitive impairment and frailty (by any measure), AND excluded studies on specific disease populations, interventions, epidemiology or prediction of mortality. Searches used Web of Science, PubMed and Science Direct. Search terms included “cognitive frailty” OR ((“cognitive decline” OR “cognitive impairment”) AND (frail*)), with terms to elicit mechanisms, predictors, causes, pathways and risk factors. To ensure inclusion of animal and cell models, keywords such as “behavioural” or “cognitive decline” or “senescence”, were added. 206 papers were included. Descriptive analysis provided high-level categorisation of determinants from social and environmental through psychological to biological. Patterns distinguishing CF from Alzheimer's disease were identified and social and psychological moderators and mediators of underlying biological and physiological changes and of trajectories of CF development were suggested as foci for further research.

AB - Cognitive frailty (CF) is the conjunction of cognitive impairment without dementia and physical frailty. While predictors of each element are well-researched, mechanisms of their co-occurrence have not been integrated, particularly in terms of relationships between social, psychological, and biological factors. This interdisciplinary scoping review set out to categorise a heterogenous multidisciplinary literature to identify potential pathways and mechanisms of CF, and research gaps. Studies were included if they used the definition of CF OR focused on conjunction of cognitive impairment and frailty (by any measure), AND excluded studies on specific disease populations, interventions, epidemiology or prediction of mortality. Searches used Web of Science, PubMed and Science Direct. Search terms included “cognitive frailty” OR ((“cognitive decline” OR “cognitive impairment”) AND (frail*)), with terms to elicit mechanisms, predictors, causes, pathways and risk factors. To ensure inclusion of animal and cell models, keywords such as “behavioural” or “cognitive decline” or “senescence”, were added. 206 papers were included. Descriptive analysis provided high-level categorisation of determinants from social and environmental through psychological to biological. Patterns distinguishing CF from Alzheimer's disease were identified and social and psychological moderators and mediators of underlying biological and physiological changes and of trajectories of CF development were suggested as foci for further research.

KW - Ageing mechanisms

KW - Cognitive frailty

KW - Cognitive impairment

KW - Model organisms

KW - Physical frailty

KW - Psychosocial risk factors

U2 - 10.1016/j.arr.2024.102461

DO - 10.1016/j.arr.2024.102461

M3 - Review article

AN - SCOPUS:85203999881

VL - 101

JO - Ageing Research Reviews

JF - Ageing Research Reviews

SN - 1568-1637

M1 - 102461

ER -