Positive Effect of Cognitive Training in Older Adults with Different APOE Genotypes and COVID-19 History: A 1-Year Follow-Up Cohort Study.
Yana A ZorkinaTimur S SyunyakovOlga AbramovaAlisa AndryushchenkoDenis AndreuykEvgeniya AbbazovaDmitry GoncharovAlisa RakovaNika AndriushchenkoDmitriy A GryadunovAnna Yuryevna IkonnikovaElena FedoseevaMarina EmelyanovaKristina SolovevaKonstantin A PavlovOlga A KarpenkoVictor SavilovMarat KurmishevOlga GurinaVladimir ChekhoninGeorgy KostyukAnna MorozovaPublished in: Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
(1) Background: Older people suffer from cognitive decline; several risk factors contribute to greater cognitive decline. We used acquired (COVID-19 infection) and non-modifiable (presence of APOE rs429358 and rs7412 polymorphisms) factors to study the progression of subjective cognitive impairment while observing patients for one year. Cognitive training was used as a protective factor. (2) Methods: Two groups of subjects over the age of 65 participated in the study: group with subjective cognitive decline receiving cognitive training and individuals who did not complain of cognitive decline without receiving cognitive training (comparison group). On the first visit, the concentration of antibodies to COVID-19 and APOE genotype was measured. At the first and last point (1 year later) the Mini-Mental State Examination scale and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale were performed. (3) Results: COVID-19 infection did not affect cognitive function. A significant role of cognitive training in improving cognitive functions was revealed. Older adults with APOE-ε4 genotype showed no positive effect of cognitive training. (4) Conclusions: Future research should focus on cognitive dysfunction after COVID-19 in long-term follow-up. Attention to the factors discussed in our article, but not limited to them, are useful for a personalized approach to maintaining the cognitive health of older adults.