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Differential impact of midlife motivational abilities on cognitive impairment and depression/apathy in people with Alzheimer’s. Simon Forstmeier, Moyra Mortby, Andreas Maercker University of Zurich, Dept. of Psychology, Zurich, Switzerland. Motivational abilities ( Heckhausen, Kuhl).
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Differential impact of midlife motivational abilities on cognitive impairment and depression/apathyin people with Alzheimer’s Simon Forstmeier, Moyra Mortby, Andreas Maercker University of Zurich, Dept. of Psychology, Zurich, Switzerland
Motivational abilities(Heckhausen, Kuhl) Preintentional phase: Choice between alternative goals Decision regulation Postintentional phase: Implementation of chosen goal Activation regulation Self efficacy Motivation regulation
Brain ReserveValenzuela & Sachdev (2006) Brain Reserve Physical activities & abilities Cognitive activities & abilities Cognitive Reserve Motivational activities & abilities Motivational Reserve Social activities & abilities
German Study on Ageing, Cognition and Dementia in Primary Care Patients (AgeCoDe) • Longitudinal study on risk factors of MCI and dementia • PI: Prof. W. Maier and Prof. H. van den Bussche • Recruitment via general practitioners, in 6 centers in Germany • Baseline (2003-2004): 75+ years of age, no dementia • Exclusion criteria: consultations only through home visits, residence in a nursing home, insufficient knowledge of German, deafness or blindness, not being a regular patient of the participating practice. • Follow-up I und II after 1.5 and 3 years • Of 10.850 eligible patients 6.619 randomly selected. • At baseline 3.327, at follow-up II 2.368 • State of the art diagnosis of Alzheimer’s dementia • and Mild Cognitive Impairment
The O*NET includes A classification system of occupations Hundreds of empirically collected variables for each occupation, including cognitive, motivational, physical, social etc. abilities needed for a job If we know the main job an individual held during his life, we can estimate his premorbid motivational and cognitive abilities. Estimation of midlifemotivational abilities • Based on main occupation • Coded according to O*NET
Validation study:Correlations between O*NET variables and… Forstmeier & Maercker, 2008, Psychology & Aging
Covariates: other potential risk factors • Age • Gender • Education (CASMIN: low, moderate, high) • O*NET-based midlife cognitive abilities • Baseline cognitive abilities (MMSE) • Baseline functional abilities (ADL) • Cognitive activities (frequency of 7 activities) • Physical activities (frequency of 7 activities) • Social network (family status, siblings, children) • Vascular risk factors (hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes mellitus) • Vascular diseases (myocardial infarction, coronary heart disease, cardiac arrhythmia, stroke) • Baseline depressive symptoms (GDS) • Lifetime depression (CIDI) • ApoE ɛ4 allele
Midlife motivational abilities and incidence of MCI Forstmeier et al., 2011, Psychology & Aging
Midlife motivational abilities and incidence of AD Forstmeier et al., 2011, Psychology & Aging
Midlife motivational abilities and incidence of AD *fully adjusted model • Motivational abilities only predictor of AD in ApoE-carriers Forstmeier et al., 2011, Psychology & Aging
Aging, Demographics and Memory Study (ADAMS) Longitudinal (N=252) 115 excluded due to clinical diagnoses 3 cohorts (N=137) MCI (N=70) Unimpaired cognition (N=48) AD (N= 19) • Sub-study of the US-representative Health and Retirement Study (HRS) • Increased risk of developing dementia • Above 70 years • Stratified according to cognition, age and gender • Longitudinal study: - baseline 2001 to 2003 (N=856) • - follow-up after 18 m 2002-2005 (N=252)
ADAMS: Results: Apathy NPI Apathy T1 T2 T1 T2 T1 T2 Unimpaired MCI AD (Mortby, Maercker & Forstmeier , 2011)
Conclusions • Model of assimilative and accommodative processes (Brandtstädter): • (assimilative) persisting goal pursuit • (accommodative) flexible goal adjustment • Occupation-basedmeasuremightcaptureonlypersistinggoalpursuit. • whichis adaptive in peoplewith mild to moderate dementia • but not adaptive anymore in severedementia • Being confronted with severe cognitive loss might be a situation where holding on to unattainable goals with strong motivational efforts leads to • - unproductive persistence • - depressive reaction • - more apathetic behavior
Outlook into the future • Motivational (assimilative and accomodative) processes are trainable! • (Forstmeier & Rüddel, 2008) • Future prevention programmes should include a training of motivational abilities – besides other aspects!
Thanks to: • AgeCoDe leading investigators: • Bonn: Prof. W. Maier • Hamburg: Prof. H. van den Bussche • Düsseldorf: Prof. H. H. Abholz • Leipzig: Prof. S. Riedel-Heller • München: Prof. H. Bickel • Mannheim: Prof. S. Weyerer • All General Practitioners • All participants • Funding: • German Federal Department of Education and Research • Dr. med. Kurt Fries Foundation, Zurich, Switzerland
Motivational abilities as preditors of … • … Health behavior (Schwarzer et al., 2007) • … Depression (Rholes et al., 1989) • … Anxiety disorders (Casey et al., 2004) • … Well-being (Luszczynska et al., 2005, Kruglanski et al., 2005) • … Pain control (Bandura et al., 1987) • … Health status in chronic diseases (Riazi et al., 2004) • … Recovering from somatic diseases (Schröder et al., 1998) • … Coping with stress (Beckmann et al., 2004) • … Immune system (Wiedenfeld et al., 1990)
Motivational abilities as predictor of cognition • Expl. 1: Self-efficacy predicts memory performance of old people • (longitudinal study; Valentijn et al., Psych & Aging, 2006, 21) • Expl. 2: Conscientiousness predicts risk of dementia • (longitudinal study; Wilson et al., Arch Gen Psychiatry, 2007, 64)
Methods • 1. Neuropsychological assessment: • - Structured Interview for the Diagnosis of Dementia, Alzheimer‘s, Multi-infarct, and other Dementias according to DSM-IV and ICD-10 (SIDAM) • - 4 subscales: Orientation, Memory, Intellectual performance, Higher cortical functions (verbal & constructive abilities, language, etc.) • - CERAD: Verbal fluency, verbal memory • 2. Alzheimer’s Dementia according to DSM-IV • 3. Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) according to Winblad et al. (2004)
Validation study:Participants • 147 non-demented participants, 10% mildly cognitively impaired • stratified for age category, sex, education • Age: mean 74 (SD 8), range 60-94 • Sex: 60% female • Education: mean duration 13.6 years • Living situation: 49% at home with others, 29% alone, 22% in old people‘s homes • Recruited via University for seniors, old people‘s homes, advertisement in magazine for seniors
Selection of O*NET variables • 1. On the basis of content validity • 2. On the basis of correlations with • established self-reported motivational abilities: • Motivation and decision regulation: Volitional Components Questionnaire (VCQ, Kuhl & Fuhrmann, 1998) • Activation regulation: Locomotion and Assessment Questionnaire (LAQ, Kruglanski et al., 2000) • General Self-Efficacy (GSE) Scale (Schwarzer, 2002) • premorbid intelligence: • Vocabulary test (“Wortschatztest”, Schmidt & Metzler, 1992)
Strengths and weaknesses of the study • Strengths • Large sample • Multi-site design • Controlling for most potential risk factors • Diagnosis of MCI and AD according to current definitions • Weaknesses • No residents of nursing homes and patients who were unable to attend their GP practice rather conservative estimates of MCI and AD incidence rates • Only appr. 50% of randomly selected individuals participated selection bias • Estimate of MR: additional studies applying other measures are necessary
Cardinal et al. (2002), Neural Networks, 19:Brain areas involved in motivational regulation, self-control, delay of gratification • OFC = orbitofrontal cortex: • assessment of affective reward value • regulation of reward value • decision regulation • Acb = nucleus accumbens: • anticipating rewards, • self-control, delay of gratification • BLA = basolateral amygdala: • self-control, delay of gratification • H = hippocampus: • Representation of context
O*NET Work Styles Questionnaire How important is PERSISTENCEto the performance of your current job? How important is SELF-CONTROLto the performance of your current job?
Assessments Clinical diagnoses: - Cognitive test battery - Clinical examination incl. imagery where present • Neuropsychiatric symptoms: • Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI) (Cummings et al., 1994) • - Informant interview • - Presence, frequency and severity of 12 • neuropsychiatric domains incl. apathy and depression • - Domain score (0-12) Motivational abilities: Occupational Information Network (O*NET): - Retrospective estimate of motivational and cognitive abilities - Based on main occupation - Z-transformed scores for goal orientation and action planning (according to Forstmeier and Maercker, 2008)
ADAMS: Results: Depression (Mortby, Maercker und Forstmeier, 2011)
Summary Supports: apathy and depression as two separate syndromes Apathy and depression higher in AD patients Supports research that apathy increases with increasing cognitive impairment Depression levels remain relatively constant Apathy increases but only in those with AD and high motivational abilities Motivational abilities = moderator of relationship between cognitive impairment and apathy