Thursday, February 4, 2010

Exercise Program Associated With Denser Bones, Lower Fall Risk In Older Women

Women age 65 or comparison reserved to an exercise module for 18 months appeared to have denser skeleton as well as the marked down risk of falls, though not the marked down cardiovascular disease risk, compared with women in the control group. Wolfgang Kemmler, Ph.D., as well as colleagues during Freidrich-Alexander University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany, complicated the total of 246 comparison women...

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Decreased Muscle Strength Predicts Functional Impairments In Older Adults

Decreased flesh strength is associated with difficulty in behaving organic activities such as stooping, crouching, or kneeling (SCK) in older adults, according to an observational investigate published in the Jan issue of Physical Therapy, (PTJ) the scientific journal of the American Physical Therapy Association (APTA)...

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Healthy Adults May Need Less Sleep As They Age According To Study

A study in the Feb. 1 emanate of the journal SLEEP suggests which full of health older adults but nap disorders can design to have the marked down "sleep need" as well as to be less sleepy during the day than full of health young adults. Results uncover which during the night of 8 hours in bed, total nap time decreased significantly as well as progressively with age...

Monday, February 1, 2010

Research Roundup: Raising Seniors' Co-Pays Increases Costs; The Stimulus And Safety Net Providers

New England Journal of Medicine: Increased Ambulatory Care Copayments And Hospitalizations Among The Elderly - This study examines the consequences of increasing copayments for outpatient caring of Medicare enrollees in managed-care plans...

Friday, January 29, 2010

Impact of ambient bright light on agitation in dementia

To weigh a outcome of ambient splendid light care (BLT) upon restlessness between institutionalized persons with dementia.High intensity, low glisten ambient lighting was installed in activity as well as dining areas of a state psychiatric sanatorium unit in North Carolina as well as a dementia-specific residential care trickery in Oregon. The investigate in use a cluster-unit crossover pattern involving four ambient lighting conditions: AM splendid light, PM splendid light, All Day splendid light, as well as Standard light. Sixty-six older persons with insanity participated. Outcome measures included direct observation by research personnel as well as execution by staff caregivers of a 14-item, short form of a Cohen-Mansfield Agitation Inventory (CMAI).Analyses of observational interpretation suggested that for participants with mild/moderate dementia, restlessness was aloft underneath AM light (p = 0.003), PM light (p < 0.001), as well as All Day light (p = 0.001) than Standard light. There was also a direction toward severely demented participants being some-more agitated during AM light than Standard light (p = 0.053). Analysis of CMAI interpretation identified incompatible responses by site: a North Carolina site significantly increasing restlessness underneath AM light (p = 0.002) as well as PM light (p = 0.013) compared with All Day light whilst in Oregon, restlessness was aloft for All Day light compared to AM light (p = 0.030). In no more aged was restlessness significantly reduce underneath any healing condition, in more aged to Standard lighting.Ambient splendid light is not effective in reducing restlessness in insanity as well as may exacerbate this behavioral symptom. Copyright 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Among Older Drinkers, Social Factors Can Both Predict And Sustain Alcohol Misuse

Social factors have consistently been concerned as a cause of vulnerability to ethanol use as well as abuse. The retreat is also true, in that individuals who rivet in extreme drinking might change their amicable context...

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Memory complaints and increased rates of brain atrophy: risk factors for mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease

To determine rates of cerebral atrophy in people with symptoms of mental recall loss though no objective cognitive spoil (SNCI) as well as their association with future cognitive decline.Thirty-two SNCI subjects, sixteen with mild cognitive spoil (MCI) as well as twenty-seven carry out subjects had clinical comment as well as magnetic resonance imaging during baseline as well as 1 year later. Rates of total brain atrophy (WBA), hippocampal atrophy (HA) as well as ventricular increase (VE) were measured. Our outcome was clinical diagnosis during 2 years after entry in to a study.The MCI group had larger rates of WBA, HA as well as VE than both controls as well as SNCI subjects. As a group SNCI subjects did not have significantly larger rates of atrophy than a controls. However, SNCI subjects who progressed to MCI or insanity had increasing rates of atrophy compared with those who remained stable.Individuals with mental recall complaints though no objective mental recall deficits, who progress to MCI or dementia, have increasing rates of cerebral atrophy. Copyright 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.