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Dive into the research topics where David C. Steffens is active.

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Featured researches published by David C. Steffens.


Neuroepidemiology | 2007

Prevalence of Dementia in the United States: The Aging, Demographics, and Memory Study

Brenda L. Plassman; Kenneth M. Langa; Gwenith G. Fisher; Steven G. Heeringa; David R. Weir; Mary Beth Ofstedal; James R. Burke; Michael D. Hurd; Guy G. Potter; Willard L. Rodgers; David C. Steffens; Robert J. Willis; Robert B. Wallace

Aim: To estimate the prevalence of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and other dementias in the USA using a nationally representative sample. Methods: The Aging, Demographics, and Memory Study sample was composed of 856 individuals aged 71 years and older from the nationally representative Health and Retirement Study (HRS) who were evaluated for dementia using a comprehensive in-home assessment. An expert consensus panel used this information to assign a diagnosis of normal cognition, cognitive impairment but not demented, or dementia (and dementia subtype). Using sampling weights derived from the HRS, we estimated the national prevalence of dementia, AD and vascular dementia by age and gender. Results: The prevalence of dementia among individuals aged 71 and older was 13.9%, comprising about 3.4 million individuals in the USA in 2002. The corresponding values for AD were 9.7% and 2.4 million individuals. Dementia prevalence increased with age, from 5.0% of those aged 71–79 years to 37.4% of those aged 90 and older. Conclusions: Dementia prevalence estimates from this first nationally representative population-based study of dementia in the USA to include subjects from all regions of the country can provide essential information for effective planning for the impending healthcare needs of the large and increasing number of individuals at risk for dementia as our population ages.


Neurology | 2000

Documented head injury in early adulthood and risk of Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias

Brenda L. Plassman; Richard J. Havlik; David C. Steffens; Michael J. Helms; Tiffany N. Newman; Deborah L. Drosdick; Caroline L. Phillips; Barbara A. Gau; Kathleen A. Welsh-Bohmer; James R. Burke; Jack M. Guralnik; John C. S. Breitner

Background: The association between antecedent head injury and AD is inconsistent. Objective: To examine the association between early adult head injury, as documented by military hospital records, and dementia in late life; and to evaluate the interaction between head injury and APOE ε4 as risk factors for dementia. Methods: The study had a population-based prospective historical cohort design. It included men who were World War II Navy and Marine veterans, and were hospitalized during their military service with a diagnosis of either a nonpenetrating head injury or another unrelated condition. In 1996 to 1997, military medical records were abstracted to document the occurrence and details of closed head injury. The entire sample was then evaluated for dementia and AD using a multistage procedure. There were 548 veterans with head injury and 1228 without head injury who completed all assigned stages of the study. The authors estimated risk of dementia, specifically AD, using proportional hazards models. Results: Both moderate head injury (hazard ratio [HR] = 2.32; CI = 1.04 to 5.17) and severe head injury (HR = 4.51; CI = 1.77 to 11.47) were associated with increased risk of AD. Results were similar for dementia in general. The results for mild head injury were inconclusive. When the authors stratified by the number of APOE ε4 alleles, they observed a nonsignificant trend toward a stronger association between AD and head injury in men with more ε4 alleles. Conclusions: Moderate and severe head injuries in young men may be associated with increased risk of AD and other dementias in late life. However, the authors cannot exclude the possibility that other unmeasured factors may be influencing this association.


Neurology | 1999

APOE-ε4 count predicts age when prevalence of AD increases, then declines The Cache County Study

John C. S. Breitner; Bonita W. Wyse; James C. Anthony; Kathleen A. Welsh-Bohmer; David C. Steffens; Maria C. Norton; JoAnn T. Tschanz; Brenda L. Plassman; M. R. Meyer; Ingemar Skoog; Ara S. Khachaturian

Objective: To examine the prevalence of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and other dementias in relation to age, education, sex, and genotype at APOE. Recent studies suggest age heterogeneity in the risk of AD associated with the APOE genotype and a possible interaction between APOE-ε4 and female sex as risk factors. We studied these topics in the 5,677 elderly residents of Cache County, Utah, a population known for long life expectancy and high participation rates. Methods: We screened for dementia with a brief cognitive test and structured telephone Dementia Questionnaire, then examined all individuals with apparent cognitive symptoms and a sample of others. We estimated age-specific prevalence of AD and other dementias and used multiple logistic regression models to describe relation of AD prevalence to age, sex, education, and APOE genotype. Results: We found 335 demented individuals, 230 (69%) with definite, probable, or possible AD (positive predictive value versus autopsy confirmation 85%). The adjusted prevalence estimate for AD was 6.5% and for all dementias 9.6%. After age 90, the adjusted prevalence estimate for AD was 28% and for all dementias 38%. Regression models showed strong variation in AD prevalence with age, sex, education, and number of ε4 alleles (effect of ε2 not significant). Models were improved by a term for age-squared (negative coefficient) and by separate terms for interaction of age with presence of one or two ε4 alleles. An association of AD with female sex was ascribable entirely to individuals with ε4. Conclusions: In participants with no ε4 alleles, the age-specific prevalence of AD reached a maximum and then declined after age 95. In ε4 heterozygotes a similar maximum was noted earlier at age 87, in homozygotes at age 73. Female sex was a risk factor for AD only in those with ε4. The ε4 allele accounted for 70% of the population attributable risk for AD.


Biological Psychiatry | 2000

Hippocampal volume in geriatric depression

David C. Steffens; Christopher E. Byrum; Douglas R. McQuoid; Daniel L. Greenberg; Martha E. Payne; Timothy F. Blitchington; James R. MacFall; K. Ranga Rama Krishnan

BACKGROUND There is a growing literature on the importance of hippocampal volume in geriatric depression. METHODS We examined hippocampal volume in a group of elderly depressed patients and a group of elderly control subjects (N = 66 geriatric depressed patients and 18 elderly nondepressed control subjects) recruited through Dukes Mental Health Clinical Research Center for the Study of Depression in the Elderly. The subjects received a standardized evaluation, including a magnetic resonance imaging scan of the brain. Patients had unipolar major depression and were free of comorbid major psychiatric illness and neurologic illness. Differences were assessed using t tests and linear regression modeling. RESULTS Accounting for the effects of age, gender, and total brain volume, depressed patients tended to have smaller right hippocampal volume (p =.014) and left hippocampal volume (p =.073). Among depressed patients, age of onset was negatively but not significantly related to right hippocampal volume (p =.052) and to left hippocampal volume (p =.062). We noted that among subjects with either right or left hippocampal volume of 3 mL or less, the vast majority were patients rather than control subjects. CONCLUSIONS These results support a role for hippocampal dysfunction in depression, particularly in late-age onset depression. Longitudinal studies examining both depressive and cognitive outcomes are needed to clarify the relationships between the hippocampus, depression, and dementia.


Biological Psychiatry | 1998

Structural neuroimaging and mood disorders: Recent findings, implications for classification, and future directions

David C. Steffens; K. Ranga Rama Krishnan

Neuroimaging is playing an increasing role in research of affective disorders, with investigators examining both volumetric changes of specific brain structures and vascular changes within white and gray matter. Recent studies have attempted to make clinical correlations between neuroimaging changes in unipolar and bipolar mood disorders. In this review, we focus particularly on those changes that are clinically meaningful. We conclude that there is enough evidence to begin to evaluate inclusion of neuroimaging findings in our mood disorder classification system. To this end, we propose two new mood disorder subtypes, vascular depression and vascular mania. Directions for future research in neuroimaging are then discussed.


Nature Genetics | 1998

APOE Genotype Predicts When - not Whether - One is Predisposed to Develop Alzheimer Disease

Marion R Meyer; JoAnn T. Tschanz; Maria C. Norton; Kathleen A. Welsh-Bohmer; David C. Steffens; Bonita W. Wyse; John C.S. Breitner

APOE genotype predicts when — not whether — one is predisposed to develop Alzheimer disease


Biological Psychiatry | 2006

Cognitive Function in Late Life Depression: Relationships to Depression Severity, Cerebrovascular Risk Factors and Processing Speed

Yvette I. Sheline; M Deanna; Keith S. Garcia; Kenneth Gersing; Carl F. Pieper; Kathleen A. Welsh-Bohmer; David C. Steffens; P. Murali Doraiswamy

BACKGROUND A number of studies have examined clinical factors linked to worse neuropsychological performance in late life depression (LLD). To understand the influence of LLD on cognition, it is important to determine if deficits in a number of cognitive domains are relatively independent, or mediated by depression- related deficits in a basic domain such as processing speed. METHODS Patients who met DSM-IV criteria for major depression (n = 155) were administered a comprehensive neuropsychological battery of tasks grouped into episodic memory, language, working memory, executive function, and processing speed domains. Multiple regression analyses were conducted to determine contributions of predictor variables to cognitive domains. RESULTS Age, depression severity, education, race and vascular risk factors all made significant and independent contributions to one or more domains of cognitive function, with all five making independent contributions to processing speed. Age of onset made no independent contribution, after accounting for age and vascular risk factors. Of the five cognitive domains investigated, changes in processing speed were found to most fully mediate the influence of predictor variables on all other cognitive domains. CONCLUSIONS While slowed processing speed appears to be the most core cognitive deficit in LLD, it was closely followed by executive function as a core cognitive deficit. Future research is needed to help clarify mechanisms leading to LLD- related changes in processing speed, including the potential role of white matter abnormalities.


Stroke | 1999

Cerebrovascular Disease and Depression Symptoms in the Cardiovascular Health Study

David C. Steffens; Michael J. Helms; K. Ranga Rama Krishnan; Gregory L. Burke

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Evidence is mounting linking cerebrovascular disease with depressive symptoms in the elderly. Lesions in both white and gray matter have been associated with depressive symptoms and major depression. We sought to investigate the relationship between depressive symptoms and white and gray matter lesions in subjects participating in the Cardiovascular Health Study. METHODS In a sample of 3660 men and women who underwent a standardized interview, physical examination, and MRI scan, we examined the association between number of white and gray matter lesions and white matter grade (a measure of severity) and reported depressive symptoms using a modified version of the Centers for Epidemiologic Studies Depression (CES-D) scale. We controlled for a variety of demographic and medical variables as well as functional status and Modified Mini-Mental State Examination score. RESULTS The number of small (<3 mm) basal ganglia lesions was significantly associated with reported depressive symptoms, but white matter grade was not. In subsequent logistic regression models, number of basal ganglia lesions remained a significant predictor after controlling for non-MRI variables and severity of white matter lesions. CONCLUSIONS Our findings extend previous reports that linked cerebrovascular changes to depressive symptoms in clinical populations to a large community-based population. This report provides further evidence of the importance of basal ganglia lesions in geriatric depression.


Biological Psychiatry | 2006

Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and anterior cingulate cortex white matter alterations in late-life depression

Jae Nam Bae; James R. MacFall; K. Ranga Rama Krishnan; Martha E. Payne; David C. Steffens; Warren D. Taylor

BACKGROUND The dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) and anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) are critical for mood regulation. Alterations in the white matter connections of these regions may impair their role in mood regulation and increase the risk of developing depression. This study used diffusion tensor imaging to examine for white matter microstructural abnormalities of these regions and of central white matter structures in late-life depression. METHODS One hundred six elderly depressed subjects and eighty-four elderly nondepressed subjects underwent clinical assessment and diffusion tensor imaging. The apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) and fractional anisotropy (FA) were measured in regions of interest placed in the white matter of the DLPFC, ACC, corpus callosum, and internal capsule. Differences between groups were assessed, controlling for age, sex, and total cerebral volume. RESULTS After controlling for covariates, depressed subjects had significantly lower FA values in white matter of the right ACC, bilateral superior frontal gyri, and left middle frontal gyrus. There were no significant differences in ADC values. CONCLUSIONS Lower FA, representing lower tissue organization, is observed in depressed elders in the DLPFC and right ACC. These findings support the hypothesis that altered connectivity between brain regions contributes to the risk of depression.


Biological Psychiatry | 2004

Clinical Characteristics of Magnetic Resonance Imaging-Defined Subcortical Ischemic Depression

K. Ranga Rama Krishnan; Warren D. Taylor; Douglas R. McQuoid; James R. MacFall; Martha E. Payne; James M. Provenzale; David C. Steffens

BACKGROUND There is a substantial body of research supporting the vascular depression hypothesis of late-life depression. To update this hypothesis so it incorporates recent research, we propose that the term subcortical ischemic vascular depression may be a more accurate representation of the disease process. We sought to investigate this diagnosis as a construct by examining differences between depressed subjects with and without magnetic resonance imaging defined subcortical ischemic vascular depression. METHODS This case-control study examined 139 depressed elderly subjects. Demographic data, psychiatric, medical, and family history, depressive symptomatology, and functional impairment were compared between groups dichotomized based on neuroimaging findings. RESULTS Seventy-five (54%) of the subjects met neuroimaging criteria for subcortical ischemic vascular depression. Age was most strongly associated with increased prevalence of subcortical ischemic vascular depression. Lassitude and a history of hypertension were also positively associated with the diagnosis; a family history of mental illness and loss of libido were negatively associated with the diagnosis. CONCLUSIONS These data support that subcortical ischemic vascular depression may be a specific syndrome from other types of late-life depression. Further research is needed to further characterize this disorder, particularly in regards to cognitive function and treatment implications.

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K. Ranga Rama Krishnan

National University of Singapore

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Warren D. Taylor

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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