Ambient Air Pollution and Long-Term Trajectories of Episodic Memory Decline among Older Women in the WHIMS-ECHO Cohort

Sep 13, 2021Environmental health perspectives

Air Pollution and Long-Term Memory Decline in Older Women

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Abstract

In a study of 2,056 older women, associations between air pollution and episodic memory decline were identified, particularly in those classified as 'slow-decliners.'

  • Two latent classes of episodic memory trajectories were identified: 'slow-decliners' and 'fast-decliners.'
  • Recent exposure to air pollution was associated with greater declines in episodic memory scores in the slow-decliner group, while this association was not observed in fast-decliners.
  • Stronger associations were found for recent exposure compared to remote exposure in the slow-decliner class.
  • The largest class was identified as 'steady-decliners,' while a second class, 'cognitively resilient,' showed no average decline in memory scores.
  • Recent air pollution exposure may have a nonsignificant acceleration effect on episodic memory decline in the fast-decliner and cognitively resilient classes.

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