Association of Coffee Consumption with MRI Markers and Cognitive Function

A Population-Based Study

Journal Article (2016)
Author(s)

Larissa Fortunato Araújo (Erasmus MC)

Saira Saeed Mirza (Erasmus MC)

Daniel Bos (Erasmus MC)

Wiro J. Niessen (TU Delft - ImPhys/Imaging Physics, Erasmus MC, TU Delft - ImPhys/Quantitative Imaging)

Sandhi Maria Barreto

Aad Van Der Lugt (Erasmus MC)

Meike W. Vernooij (Erasmus MC)

Albert Hofman (Erasmus MC)

Henning Tiemeier (Erasmus MC)

M. Arfan Ikram (Erasmus MC)

M. Cristina Polidori

Research Group
ImPhys/Quantitative Imaging
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.3233/JAD-160116
More Info
expand_more
Publication Year
2016
Language
English
Research Group
ImPhys/Quantitative Imaging
Issue number
2
Volume number
53
Pages (from-to)
451-461
Downloads counter
276

Abstract

Background: Coffee is one of the most widely consumed beverages worldwide and has been of considerable interest in research on cognition and dementia. Objective: To investigate the effect of coffee on preclinical brain MRI markers of dementia and cognitive performance. Methods: In 2,914 participants from the population-based Rotterdam Study (mean age: 59.3±7.2 years, 55 females), we assessed coffee consumption, performed brain MRI, and assessed cognition at baseline. To study cognitive change, cognitive assessment was repeated after 5 years of follow-up. Coffee consumption was analyzed continuously (per cup increase) and in categories (0-1,>1-3,>3 cups/day). Using logistic and linear regression, associations of coffee consumption with lacunar infarcts and brain tissue volumes on MRI, and cognitive performance (cross-sectional and longitudinal) were investigated, adjusting for relevant confounders. Results: We found that higher coffee consumption was associated with a lower prevalence of lacunar infarcts [odds ratio per cup increase: 0.88 (95 CI:0.79;0.98)], and smaller hippocampal volume [difference: -0.01 (95 CI:-0.02;0.00)]. Also, we found that the highest category of coffee consumption was associated with better performance on the Letter Digit Substitution Task [difference: 1.13(95 CI:0.39;1.88)], Word Fluency test [0.74(95 CI:0.04,1.45)], Stroop interference task [1.82(95 CI:0.23;3.41)], and worse performance on the 15-Word Learning test delayed recall [-0.38(95 CI:-0.74;-0.02)]. These associations were not found when cognition was analyzed longitudinally. Conclusion: We found complex associations between coffee consumption, brain structure, and cognition. Higher coffee consumption was cross-sectionally associated with a lower occurrence of lacunar infarcts and better executive function, but also with smaller hippocampal volume and worse memory function.

No files available

Metadata only record. There are no files for this record.