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AuthorKhaled, Yousef
AuthorAbdelhamid, Aya A.
AuthorAl-Mazroey, Hissa
AuthorAlmannai, Abdulrahman K.
AuthorFetais, Sara
AuthorAl-Srami, Aisha S.
AuthorAhmed, Shaima
AuthorAl-Hajri, Noora
AuthorMustafa, Ayman
AuthorChivese, Tawanda
AuthorDjouhri, Laiche
Available date2023-11-05T06:14:29Z
Publication Date2023
Publication NameInternal and Emergency Medicine
ResourceScopus
ISSN18280447
URIhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11739-023-03337-1
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/49000
AbstractAge-related cognitive impairment can occur many years before the onset of the clinical symptoms of dementia. Uric acid (UA), a metabolite of purine-rich foods, has been shown to be positively associated with improved cognitive function, but such association remains controversial. Moreover, most of the previous studies investigating the association included elderly participants with memory-related diseases. Therefore, the present study aimed at investigating whether serum UA (sUA) is associated with cognitive performance in healthy middle-aged individuals. We conducted a cross-sectional study on a cohort of middle-aged individuals (40–60 years old) who participated in the Qatar Biobank. The participants had no memory-related diseases, schizophrenia, stroke, or brain damage. They were divided according to sUA level into a normal group (< 360 μmol/L) and a high group (≥ 360 μmol/L), and underwent an assessment of cognitive function using the Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated Battery. Two cognitive function domains were assessed: (a) speed of reaction/reaction time and (b) short-term visual memory. The median age of the 931 participants included in the study was 48.0 years (IQR: 44.0, 53.0), of which 47.6% were male. Adjusted multivariable linear regression analyses showed that higher sUA is associated with poorer performance on the visual memory domain of cognitive function (β = − 6.87, 95% CI − 11.65 to − 2.10, P = 0.005), but not on the speed of reaction domain (β = − 55.16, 95% CI − 190.63 to 80.30, P = 0.424). Our findings support previous studies suggesting an inverse association between high sUA levels and cognitive function in elderly and extend the evidence for such a role to middle-aged participants. Further prospective studies are warranted to investigate the relationship between UA and cognition.
SponsorOpen Access funding provided by the Qatar National Library. This paper was made possible by a grant (NPRP13s-0213-200352) to LD.
Languageen
PublisherSpringer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH
SubjectCognitive function
Qatar Biobank (QBB)
Uric acid
TitleHigher serum uric acid is associated with poorer cognitive performance in healthy middle-aged people: a cross-sectional study
TypeArticle
Pagination1701-1709
Issue Number6
Volume Number18


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