Survival in Frontotemporal
Dementia Found To Be Increased in People With More Demanding Jobs
MAY 22ND, 2015 DANIELA SEMEDO, PHD ALZHEIMER'S
NEWS, NEWS 0 COMMENTS
Findings from a recent study
published in the journal Neurology revealed
that individuals with more skilled jobs may live longer after
developing frontotemporal dementia in comparison
with individuals with less skilled jobs.
Frontotemporal dementia is a
condition that mainly affects individuals aged under 65 years and causes
personality or behavior changes and language problems.
“This study suggests that having a
higher occupational level protects the brain from some of the effects of this
disease, allowing people to live longer after developing the disease,”
said study author Lauren Massimo, PhD, CRNP, of the University of
Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania State University in State College
and a member of the American Academy of Neurology.
Results from this study add evidence
to the “cognitive reserve” theory concerning the fact that more educated people
with more intellectual activity have a buffering protection against the
condition.
“People with frontotemporal dementia
typically live six to 10 years after the symptoms emerge, but little has been
known about what factors contribute to this range,” Massimo said in the news release.
The research team reviewed clinical
records from autopsy of a total of 83 patients who had a frontotemporal
dementia or Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis, and also
used data about the patients’ occupations. Then the researchers categorized
peoples’ jobs according with the U.S. Census classes, with jobs such as factory
workers and service workers in the lowest level; jobs such as tradesworkers and
sales people in the next level; and professional and technical workers, such as
lawyers and engineers, in the highest level.
They then examined the initiation of
symptoms, and survival was defined as from the time symptoms began until death.
Results revealed that patients with
frontotemporal dementia had an average seven years of survival time. The
researchers found that those individuals with more skills jobs had longer
survival in comparison to those with less skilled jobs. Individuals who were
more skilled had an average survival of 116 months, in comparison with those
while people with less skilled jobs who had an average of 72 months of
survival, indicating that people with more skilled jobs may live up to three
years longer.
The number of years of education did
not affect the survival time in either disease, and the level of occupation was
not related with longer survival in patients with Alzheimer’s disease.
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I always say that we may have this illness, but we are all so different.
This is my own daily problems, but I would gladly share anyone elses, if they send them in,