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The incidence of dementia increased at age 66 and 80 years for those with schizophrenia versus those without serious mental illness.
Medicare spending was higher for adults with a formal clinical diagnosis of dementia versus a positive screening for cognitive impairment.
The rate was significantly higher than seen with other pneumonias.
Among U.S. veterans, the rates of dementia were highest for Blacks and Hispanics.
Findings particularly for behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia
The percentage of older U.S. decedents with a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias increased significantly from 2004 to 2017.
Excessive daytime napping over a year predicts worse cognitive performance the following year, and vice versa.
The one-year incidence rate of post-COVID dementia was 12.7% in adults ≥65 years hospitalized with COVID-19.
No significant association was seen for glaucoma surgery with dementia risk in a prospective study involving older adults.
The findings were seen in patients with dementia presenting with clinical factors known to be predictive of pulmonary embolism risk.