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International Psychogeriatrics | 2006

Successful aging in Shanghai, China: definition, distribution and related factors

Chunbo Li; Wenyuan Wu; Hua Jin; Xu Zhang; Haibo Xue; Yanling He; Shifu Xiao; Dilip V. Jeste; Mingyuan Zhang

OBJECTIVE There are few studies of successful aging in China. This study was designed to investigate the distribution, and related factors, of successful aging in an elderly Chinese population. METHODS A cross-sectional, community-dwelling elderly population was surveyed in Shanghai, China. We defined successful aging based on a multi-dimensional model. Correlates of successful aging were explored through the Shanghai Successful Aging Project Questionnaire, which includes sociodemographic questions, and a battery of standardized instruments, including the Chinese version of the Mini-mental State Examination, activities of daily living, and the Life Satisfaction Index A (LSIA). RESULTS The rate of successful aging was 46.2% [95% confidence interval (CI) 43.6-48.7] among people aged 65 or above, and the rate for males was higher than that for females. The rate was much lower for those aged 85 years or over (9.4%). Logistic regression analysis suggested that female gender and older age were unfavorable factors for successful aging. A higher score on the LSIA, more leisure activities and being currently married related to successful aging. CONCLUSION The rate of successful aging in Shanghai, China is similar to that found in studies from western countries. There are some potentially modifiable factors that may relate to successful aging.


BMC Medicine | 2012

The effects of multi-domain versus single-domain cognitive training in non-demented older people: a randomized controlled trial

Yan Cheng; Wenyuan Wu; Wei Feng; Jiaqi Wang; You Chen; Yuan Shen; Qingwei Li; Xu Zhang; Chunbo Li

BackgroundWhether healthy older people can benefit from cognitive training (CogTr) remains controversial. This study explored the benefits of CogTr in community dwelling, healthy, older adults and compared the effects of single-domain with multi-domain CogTr interventions.MethodsA randomized, controlled, 3-month trial of CogTr with double-blind assessments at baseline and immediate, 6-month and 12-month follow-up after training completion was conducted. A total of 270 healthy Chinese older people, 65 to 75 years old, were recruited from the Ganquan-area community in Shanghai. Participants were randomly assigned to three groups: multi-domain CogTr, single-domain CogTr, and a wait-list control group. Twenty-four sessions of CogTr were administrated to the intervention groups over a three-month period. Six months later, three booster training sessions were offered to 60% of the initial training participants. The Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status (RBANS, Form A), the Color Word Stroop test (CWST), the Visual Reasoning test and the Trail Making test (TMT) were used to assess cognitive function.ResultsMulti-domain CogTr produced statistically significant training effects on RBANS, visual reasoning, and immediate and delayed memory, while single-domain CogTr showed training effects on RBANS, visual reasoning, word interference, and visuospatial/constructional score (all P < 0.05). At the 12-month posttest, the multi-domain CogTr showed training effects on RBANS, delayed memory and visual reasoning, while single-domain CogTr only showed effects on word interference. Booster training resulted in effects on RBANS, visual reasoning, time of trail making test, and visuospatial/constructional index score.ConclusionsCognitive training can improve memory, visual reasoning, visuospatial construction, attention and neuropsychological status in community-living older people and can help maintain their functioning over time. Multi-domain CogTr enhanced memory proficiency, while single-domain CogTr augmented visuospatial/constructional and attention abilities. Multi-domain CogTr had more advantages in training effect maintenance.Clinical Trial RegistrationChinese Clinical Trial Registry. Registration number: ChiCTR-TRC-09000732.


Archives of Medical Science | 2011

Reliability and validity of the Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status in community- dwelling elderly

Yan Cheng; Wenyuan Wu; Jiaqi Wang; Wei Feng; Xiangwei Wu; Chunbo Li

Introduction The Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status (RBANS) is a widely used screening instrument in neuropsychological assessment and is a brief, individually administered measure. The present study aims to assess the reliability and validity of the Chinese version of the RBANS in community-dwelling elderly. Material and methods All subjects come from the community-dwelling elderly in Shanghai, China. They completed a questionnaire concerning demographic information, the mini-mental state examination (MMSE) and the Chinese version of the RBANS. To test for internal consistency, Cronbachs α was calculated for all six RBANS indices. Correlations between each of the RBANS and MMSE subtests were conducted to measure the concurrent validity. A confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was conducted to test the construct validity. Results The final sample of participants included 236 community-dwelling elderly. The mean total score on the RBANS was 86.02 (±14.19). The RBANS total score showed strong internal consistency (r = 0.806), and the coefficient α value for each of the RBANS scales ranged from 0.142 to 0.727. The total RBANS score was highly correlated with that of the MMSE (r = 0.594, p<0.001), and the RBANS subtests also demonstrated strong correlations with most of the MMSE subtests. The results of the CFA indicated an acceptable fit between the Chinese version of the RBANS and the original. Conclusions The Chinese version of the RBANS had relatively good reliability and validity in a community-dwelling elderly sample. It may be a useful screening instrument for conducting cognitive assessments in community-dwelling elderly.


Progress in Neuro-psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry | 2009

A randomized double-blind clinical trial on analgesic efficacy of fluoxetine for persistent somatoform pain disorder

Yanli Luo; Mingyuan Zhang; Wenyuan Wu; Chunbo Li; Zheng Lu; Qingwei Li

OBJECTIVES To verify the efficacy and safety of fluoxetine in treating patients with persistent somatoform pain disorder (PSPD). METHODS In this 8-week, randomized double-blind placebo-controlled study, 80 patients with an ICD-10 diagnosis of PSPD were randomly assigned to receive 20mg fluoxetine or a placebo. Several psychological scales including Medical Outcomes Study Pain Measures (MOSPM), Hamilton Depression Scale-17 items (HAMD(17)) and Treatment Emergent Symptom Scale (TESS) were used to assess analgesic efficacy and safety of fluoxetine, and the possible analgesic mechanism of fluoxetine was preliminarily analyzed. All data were analyzed by SPSS11.5 with t-test, one-way ANOVA and a mixed-effects model repeated measures analysis. Intent-to-treat (ITT) analysis was performed and the last observation carry forward (LOCF) was used for missing values. RESULTS There was a significant difference of MOSPM total score between the fluoxetine and placebo group after 2 weeks of treatment. The analgesic effect of fluoxetine was related with treatment time, and depressive patients showed a better analgesic effect than non-depressive patients. An adverse effect of fluoxetine was scarcely found. CONCLUSIONS Fluoxetine has a better analgesic effect than a placebo in treating persistent somatoform pain disorder, and is considered a safe treatment; its analgesic effect may be related to an antidepressant effect.


Current Alzheimer Research | 2014

Retinal nerve fiber layer thickness is associated with episodic memory deficit in mild cognitive impairment patients.

Yuan Shen; Liang Liu; Yan Cheng; Wei Feng; Zhongyong Shi; Yikang Zhu; Wenyuan Wu; Chunbo Li

Changes in retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) thickness have been reported in patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), the pre-dementia stage of Alzheimers disease (AD). However, whether RNFL thickness is associated with specific cognitive impairment of MCI patients remains unknown. Therefore, we set out to investigate the potential association between RNFL thickness and episodic memory in MCI patients. Seventy five older adults (mean age 74 ± 3 years, 55% men) were included in the study. Fifty-two participants had normal cognition (NC), and 23 participants were diagnosed with MCI. RNFL thickness was obtained by optical coherence tomography measurement. Cognitive function was evaluated by the Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status on the same day of the optical examination. We found that nasal quadrant RNFL thickness was positively associated with episodic memory scores in the participants with normal cognition: word list learning (r=0.392, p=0.004) and story recall (r=0.307, p=0.027). In the participants with MCI, however, the inferior quadrant RNFL thickness was inversely associated with the episodic memory score: word list learning (r=-0.652, p=0.001), story memory (r=-0.429, p=0.041), and story recall (r=-0.502, p=0.015,). The findings from this pilot study suggest that the inferior quadrant RNFL thickness was associated with specific episodic memory in MCI patients and could serve as a biomarker of MCI and AD. These findings would promote more studies to determine the potential application of RNFL as an AD biomarker.


Psychology Health & Medicine | 2014

Factors influencing quality of life in Chinese patients with persistent somatoform pain disorder

Yanli Luo; Anisha Heeramun-Aubeeluck; Xiao Huang; Gang Ye; Heng Wu; Lin Sun; Liang Liu; Wenyuan Wu; Zheng Lu; Chun-Bo Li; Mingyuan Zhang

This cross-sectional survey aimed to explore quality of life (QoL) and its correlated factors in Chinese patients with persistent somatoform pain disorder (PSPD) and their related correlation factors in Shanghai, China. A total of 60 patients were assessed with Short Form (36) health survey (SF-36) for QoL, medical outcomes study pain measurement (MOSPM) for pain symptoms, Hamilton depression scale – 17 items (HAMD) for depression and Hamilton anxiety scale (HAMA) for anxiety. Results were as follows: (1) Patients scored significantly lower on all SF-36 subscales’ scores ( p < .01) apart from the mental health and vitality subscales; (2) With the exception of the general health subscale, SF-36 subscales’ scores were negatively correlated with the total score of MOSPM, three factor scores of MOSPM, and total scores of HAMD and HAMA; (3) PSPD patients with severe depression had significantly lower scores (p < .01) on SF-36 subscales’ scores (except for GH subscale) and component summary scores as compared to PSPD patients with none or moderate depression; and (4) Multiple linear stepwise regression revealed that SF-36’s physical component summary (PCS) subscale correlated with patients’ age and MOSPM total score while SF-36’s mental component summary (MCS) subscale correlated with total scores of HAMD and MOSPM total score. In sum, PSPD patients had a lower QoL as compared to general population. Pain, depression, and anxiety were significantly correlated with QoL of PSPD patients while age, pain, and depression were important factors influencing PCS and MCS.


Scientific Reports | 2016

The Impact of Cognitive Training on Cerebral White Matter in Community-Dwelling Elderly: One-Year Prospective Longitudinal Diffusion Tensor Imaging Study.

Xinyi Cao; Ye Yao; Ting Li; Yan Cheng; Wei Feng; Yuan Shen; Qingwei Li; LiJuan Jiang; Wenyuan Wu; Jijun Wang; Jianhua Sheng; Jianfeng Feng; Chunbo Li

It has been shown that cognitive training (CogTr) is effective and recuperative for older adults, and can be used to fight against cognitive decline. In this study, we investigated whether behavioural gains from CogTr would extend to white matter (WM) microstructure, and whether training-induced changes in WM integrity would be associated with improvements in cognitive function, using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI). 48 healthy community elderly were either assigned to multi-domain or single-domain CogTr groups to receive 24 sessions over 12 weeks, or to a control group. DTI was performed at both baseline and 12-month follow-up. Positive effects of multi-domain CogTr on long-term changes in DTI indices were found in posterior parietal WM. Participants in the multi-domain group showed a trend of long-term decrease in axial diffusivity (AD) without significant change in fractional anisotropy (FA), mean diffusivity (MD) or radial diffusivity (RD), while those in the control group displayed a significant FA decrease, and an increase in MD and RD. In addition, significant relationships between an improvement in processing speed and changes in RD, MD and AD were found in the multi-domain group. These findings support the hypothesis that plasticity of WM can be modified by CogTr, even in late adulthood.


Shanghai archives of psychiatry | 2014

Cross-sectional study of the association of cognitive function and hippocampal volume among healthy elderly adults

LiJuan Jiang; Yan Cheng; Qingwei Li; Yingying Tang; Yuan Shen; Ting Li; Wei Feng; Xinyi Cao; Wenyuan Wu; Jijun Wang; Chunbo Li

Background Cognitive impairment and dementia among elderly adults is a pressing public health issue in China but research on biomarkers of cognitive decline has been limited. Aim Explore the relationship between multiple domains of cognitive functioning and the volume of the left and right hippocampus in healthy elderly adults. Methods Structural MRI scanning was performed on 65 community-dwelling healthy participants 65 to 75 years of age using the Siemens 3.0 T Trio Tim with the MPRAGE sequence. The volumes of the left and right hippocampus were determined using Freesurfer software. Cognitive functioning was evaluated using the Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status (RBANS). Both unadjusted and adjusted associations between the hippocampal volumes and cognitive functioning were estimated. Results Within this relatively narrow age range, age was significantly associated with most of the cognitive measures assessed in women but was not significantly associated with any of the cognitive measures in men. In both men and women right hippocampal volume was positively associated with delayed memory and left hippocampal volume was positively associated with both immediate memory and delayed memory (though the relationship with delayed memory in women was only at a trend level). After adjustment for age, gender, and years of formal education (the variable that was most strongly associated with all of the cognitive measures), both left hippocampal volume and right hippocampal volume were positively associated with delayed memory, but not with immediate memory. Interestingly, the difference in the volumes of the left and right hippocampi was negatively associated with the score of the RBANS attention subscale, a relationship that was stronger in women than in men. Conclusions This study confirms previous work about the relationship of hippocampal volume and memory, identifies a possible relationship between attention and the difference in size of the two hippocampi, and suggests that there may be some differences in these relationships by gender.


Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2015

APOE Genotype Affects Cognitive Training Response in Healthy Shanghai Community-Dwelling Elderly Individuals.

Wei Feng; Jennifer S. Yokoyama; Shunying Yu; You Chen; Yan Cheng; Luke W. Bonham; Dongxiang Wang; Yuan Shen; Wenyuan Wu; Chunbo Li

BACKGROUND Cognitive training may contribute to the ability to maintain cognitive function in healthy elderly adults. Whether genotype modifies training effects remains unknown. OBJECTIVE Assess influence of APOE on cognitive function over time in community-dwelling elderly adults participating in multi-domain cognitive training. METHODS Healthy individuals ≥70 years of age were screened from one urban community in Shanghai. 145 healthy Chinese older adults met inclusion criteria and were assigned to intervention (n = 88) or control (n = 57) groups. Multi-domain cognitive training involved 24 sessions of different content taking place over 12 weeks. Neuropsychological testing was administered at baseline, immediately after training, six months and twelve months post-intervention; composite measures of cognitive function were identified via factor analysis. RESULTS Three factors explained the majority of variance in function (verbal memory, processing speed, executive function). The intervention attenuated 12-month declines in processing speed, regardless of APOE genotype (p = 0.047). Executive function declined in APOEɛ4 carriers over 12 months, regardless of intervention (p = 0.056). There was a significant interaction after 12 months where intervention ɛ4 carriers had better processing speed than ɛ4 controls (p = 0.003). Intervention ɛ2 carriers had better executive function immediately after training (p = 0.02) and had better verbal memory 6-months post-intervention (p = 0.04). These effects remained significant after false-discovery rate correction. CONCLUSION Multi-domain cognitive training reduces declines in processing speed over time. APOEɛ4 is associated with reductions in executive function over time, and training may attenuate ɛ4-associated declines in processing speed. APOEɛ2 carriers may also benefit from training, particularly on measures of executive function and verbal memory.


international conference on bioinformatics and biomedical engineering | 2008

Association Study of 5-HT2A Receptor Gene Polymorphism with Persistent Somatoform Pain Disorder and the Efficacy of Fluoxetine

Yanli Luo; Wenyuan Wu; Chunbo Li; Mingyuan Zhang; Ye Zhang; Sanduo Jiang

To analyze the association between the 5- HT2A receptor gene polymorphism and persistent somatoform pain disorder in Chinese, and to investigate the relationship between the analgesic efficacy of fluoxetine and 5-HT2A receptor gene polymorphism. 51 patients with persistent somatoform pain disorder were administered with fluoxetine(20 mg/day) for 6 weeks. The response to fluoxetine was assessed by the Medical Outcomes Study Pain Measures (MOSPM). The patients were divided into two groups (responders and non-responders) according to the MOSPM response rate. The T102C polymorphism genotype and allele frequencies of 5-HT2A receptor gene in these 51 patients and 60 healthy controls were detected with PCR-RFLP technique. 1. No significant association was found between persistent somatoform pain disorder and 5-HT2A receptor gene T102C polymorphism. 2. In responders group, number of patients with C/C genotype and C allele frequency was significantly higher than that of non-responder group, while the frequency of T/T genotype and T allele was vice versa (p<0.05). It indicated that the T102C polymorphism of the 5- HT2A receptor gene was not significant factor associated with persistent somatoform pain disorder, but it may be one predictor of the analgesic efficacy of some SSRIs treatment.

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Jijun Wang

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Ting Li

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Xinyi Cao

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Mingyuan Zhang

Shanghai Mental Health Center

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