Prevalence of Alzheimer’s Disease and Other Dementing Disorders in an Urban Community of Beijing, China

Wenzhi Wang(Beijing Institute of Neurosurgery), Shengping Wu(Beijing Institute of Neurosurgery), Xue-ming Cheng(Beijing Institute of Neurosurgery), Hanteng Dai(Oregon Department of Human Services), Kathryn Ross(Oregon Department of Human Services), Xiaoli Du(Beijing Institute of Neurosurgery), Wengang Yin
Neuroepidemiology
January 1, 2000
Cited by 63

Abstract

A door-to-door two-phase study was used to investigate the prevalence of senile dementia in an urban community of Beijing. In the study population, 5,003 individuals aged 60 years and older (>/=65 years, n = 3,728) were screened at home with the Chinese version of the MMSE. Persons who screened positive for dementia, using different cutoff scores based on degree of literacy, were further evaluated using the criteria of DSM-III-R and ICD-10. Among subjects who screened positive in phase I, 134 were diagnosed as having dementia in phase II. The prevalence ratios of dementia were 2.68% in the population aged 60 years and older, and 3.49% in the population aged 65 years and older. The prevalence rates among those aged 65 years and older were 1.85% for Alzheimer's disease, 1.37% for vascular dementia and 0.27% for other dementia (including mixed dementia). The prevalence of all dementia and AD increased steeply with advancing age and was consistently higher in women, but it was not obviously higher for VaD in women. Alzheimer's disease was the commonest type of dementia. Our prevalence figures for dementia and AD are similar to those previously reported for China.


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