Age-Related Hearing Loss, Cognitive Performance, and Metabolic Risk in Healthy Adults: A Seven-Year Longitudinal Study

Author:

Ghisletta Paolo12ORCID,Dahle Cheryl L3,Raz Naftali45

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, University of Geneva , Geneva , Switzerland

2. Faculty of Psychology, UniDistance Suisse , Brig , Switzerland

3. Institute of Gerontology, Wayne State University , Detroit, Michigan , USA

4. Department of Psychology, Stony Brook University , Stony Brook, New York , USA

5. Max Planck Institute for Human Development , Berlin-Dahlem , Germany

Abstract

Abstract Objectives Sensorineural hearing loss (presbycusis) affects up to half of the adults, is associated with cognitive decline. Whether this association reflects the cause, the consequence, or parallel processes driven by other factors remains unclear. Both presbycusis and cognition are linked to elevated metabolic risk, which in turn raises with age. Method In a multioccasion longitudinal design, we used latent change score models with strong factorial invariance to assess the change in pure-tone threshold auditory function, fluid intelligence, metabolic risk, variability therein, and the dynamic relationships among the 3 domains. We examined, up to 4 times over more than 7 years, a sample of relatively healthy 687 adults (aged 18.17–83.25 years). Results We found that levels of auditory and cognitive functioning at time t-1 influence each other’s subsequent change between times t-1 and t, even when controlling for the reciprocal effects of metabolic risk on both. Thus, auditory and cognitive functioning do not only decline in parallel in healthy adults, but also affect each other’s trajectories. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first long-term study with such evidence. Discussion Our results are in accord with extant hypotheses about auditory-cognitive associations in old age (e.g., social isolation, cognitive load, increased inflammation, reduced gene expression, and other microvascular or neuropathological factors). They also echo previous reports underscoring the need for improving access to hearing aids and other rehabilitative services aimed at reducing hearing loss. If applied early in the aging process, such interventions may mitigate cognitive decline.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology,Clinical Psychology,Social Psychology

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