Abstract
Objectives: Frailty is a common geriatric disorder associated with activities of daily living (ADL) impairment, hospitalization, and death. Phenomenological evidence suggests that late-life depression (Katz, Citation2004), particularly vascular depression, may be a risk factor for frailty. This study tests that hypothesis.
Methods: We identified a sample of stroke-free women over the age of 80 from the Health and Retirement Survey. The sample included 984 respondents in 2000 (incidence sample). Of these, 459 were non-frail at baseline and still alive in 2004 (prevalence sample). Frail respondents experienced at least three of the following: wasting, exhaustion, weakness, slowness, and falls. Vascular depression was represented using two dummy variables. The first represented respondents with either high cerebrovascular burden (CVB; at least two cerebrovascular risk factors) or probable depression (score ≥3 on the 8-item Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale (CES-D)), and the second represented respondents with both high CVB and probable depression.
Results: At baseline, the prevalence of frailty was 31.5%. Over four years the incidence of frailty was 31.8%. After controlling for age, education, ADL and IADL disability, arthritis, pulmonary disorders, cancer, and self-rated health, respondents with either high CVB or probable depression were more likely to be frail at baseline, and those with both were at even higher risk. Of those who were not frail at the 2000 wave, respondents who reported both high CVB and probable depression were more likely to become frail by 2004.
Discussion: These findings suggest that vascular depression is a prodrome for frailty.
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Acknowledgments
This work was generously supported by the Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan Foundation and by the T32 grant-supported NIH Pre-Doctoral Training Program in Aging and Urban Health at the Institute of Gerontology (T-32 AG00275-06).