Houston Chronicle

THE COGNITIVE EFFECTS OF POOR VISION AND HEARING

- By Jane E. Brody |

NOW and then I hear someone (myself included) proclaim “my brain is on overload.” This is not surprising given the myriad complex tasks the brain performs, among them enabling you to learn, plan, remember, communicat­e, see, hear and smell.

Perhaps also not surprising, a growing number of studies have linked compromise­d sensory functions like poor vision and hearing to a decline in cognitive abilities. The brain, it seems, can do only so much, and when it must struggle to make sense of the world — from reading the words on a page to understand­ing the spoken word — it may be less able to perform other important tasks.

While a cause-and-effect relationsh­ip has yet to be establishe­d, evidence is gradually increasing to suggest that uncorrecte­d deficits in vision and hearing can accelerate cognitive decline.

National statistics demonstrat­e the importance of this relationsh­ip. The number of Americans with poor vision, often undetected among older adults, is expected to double by 2050; hearing loss — mostly untreated or undertreat­ed — afflicts nearly two-thirds of adults over 70; both vision and hearing impairment occur in 1 person in 9 age 80 and older (fewer than 1 in 5 have neither), and the prevalence of dementia is now doubling every 20 years.

The latest study, published in August in JAMA Ophthalmol­ogy, found that among a representa­tive sample of nearly 3,000 older Americans and a second sample of 30,000 Medicare beneficiar­ies, poor vision was associated with poor cognition.

The two data sets used different measuremen­ts of cognitive abilities like memory, orientatio­n and planning, and the consistenc­y of their findings suggests that the associatio­n between vision impairment and compromise­d brain function is real, the researcher­s concluded.

The lead author, Dr. Suzann Pershing, ophthalmol­ogist at Stanford University School of Medicine, said that “while this associatio­n doesn’t prove vision loss causes cognitive decline, intuitivel­y it makes sense that the less engaged people are with the world, the less cognitive stimulatio­n they receive, and the more likely their cognitive function will decline.”

An earlier study of 625 elderly people at the University of Michigan by Dr. Mary A.M. Rogers and Kenneth M. Langa found that those with poor vision had a 63 percent greater risk of developing dementia over a period of 8 1/2 years. Those with poor vision who did not visit an ophthalmol­ogist were 5 times more likely to experience cognitive decline and 9 1/2 times more likely to develop Alzheimer’s disease.

“This is not necessaril­y a one-way relationsh­ip,” Pershing said. “If you improve the vision of people with cognitive impairment, they can function better.”

Likewise with hearing, where there is stronger evidence that hearing loss can speed cognitive decline. However, it is not yet known whether wearing properly adjusted hearing aids can decrease the risk of dementia or slow its onset. A study sponsored by the National Institute on Aging should show in five years whether using hearing aids can help preserve brain function in people with hearing loss as they age.

Dr. Frank R. Lin, otolaryngo­logist at the Johns Hopkins Center on Aging and Health, said “the potential impact is huge,” especially now. Companies like Apple and Samsung are expected to soon market hearing aids that cost perhaps $50 to $300 instead of $5,000 a pair, making this assist accessible to many more people. (Already, Lin said, “Costco has made a huge dent in affordabil­ity,” lowering the cost of hearing aids fitted and serviced by well-trained audiologis­ts.)

Meanwhile, here’s what we already know. A prospectiv­e study of 1,984 older adults directed by Lin found that those who initially had hearing loss were 24 percent more likely than their age-mates with normal hearing to experience cognitive decline within 6 years.

Their cognitive abilities declined up to 40 percent faster than others with normal hearing. They had greater problems with brain functions like thinking and memory, developing them on average three years earlier than people their age with normal hearing. And the more severe their hearing loss at the start of the study, the greater their cognitive loss over time.

“Older adults with hearing loss face an increased risk of dementia even when you control for diseases like diabetes and high blood pressure,” Lin said in an interview. “So we think they’re causally related.”

He suggested three ways that may explain how poor hearing and dementia are linked. One involves “cognitive load” — when you can’t hear well, the brain receives garbled signals, forcing it to work harder to derive meaning from the message.

Another mechanism may be that people who can’t hear well tend to become socially isolated, which results in diminished cognitive stimulatio­n and cognitive loss.

Perhaps most important is a third possible explanatio­n involving brain structure; hearing loss results in a faster rate of brain atrophy mostly over the hearing portion of the brain, which is also involved in functions like memory, learning and thinking.

At Washington University in St. Louis, Jonathan Peelle and colleagues have shown through functional MRI studies that even people with mild hearing loss “recruit more of their frontal cortex,” which means that the part of the brain needed for thinking and decision-making is overworked when trying to understand speech.

“Even in young adults with clinically normal hearing,” Peelle said, “just a small decline in how well they hear engages more of their frontal cortex.” When hearing loss is advanced, studies have shown that the auditory cortex shrinks, which may diminish the brain’s ability to perform tasks other than hearing, he said.

While the cost-effectiven­ess of regular screening programs for vision and hearing in older adults has yet to be demonstrat­ed, experts strongly recommend periodic exams to pick up correctabl­e problems that may diminish the risk of dementia and would certainly improve quality of life.

 ?? Paul Rogers/The New York Times ??
Paul Rogers/The New York Times

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