THE JOURNAL OF BALNEOLOGY, CLIMATOLOGY AND PHYSICAL MEDICINE
Online ISSN : 1884-3697
Print ISSN : 0029-0343
ISSN-L : 0029-0343
Originals
The Relation between Bathing Habits, Cognitive Impairment, and Depressive State in Patients with Alzheimer Disease
Yasushi IWASAKIAkira DEGUCHIEri SUZUMURAKazunori MAEDAHiroya SHIMASAKINoriyuki TANAKAYasunori MORIChihiro MIWAHitoshi HAMAGUCHIYoichi KAWAMURA
Author information
JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

2012 Volume 75 Issue 3 Pages 186-194

Details
Abstract
 Because bathing frequency decrease as Alzheimer disease (AD) worsens, we investigated the relation between cognitive disfunction and bathing frequency.
 We asked AD patients and their caregivers about the number of times the patient bathed per week before onset of dementia and the time of first clinical consultation. We investigated the relation between scores from a cognitive function test (Hasegawa’s Dementia Scale-Revised [HDS-R], the Mini Mental State Examination [MMSE] and Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-Revised [WAIS-R]), and a depression assessment (Zung Self-rating Depression Scale [SDS]) and number of baths taken per week.
 Before onset of dementia, the average number of baths taken by 89 AD patients (26 men, 63 women; range: 63-90 years, average: 79.8 years), was 6.6 times/week. At evaluation time, this number had decreased significantly to 5.3 times/week (p<0.001). A significant positive correlation was found between perfomance Intelligence Quotient (IQ) and total IQ of the WAIS-R and number of baths (p<0.001, p<0.01, respectively). No significant correlation coefficient was found between HDS-R, MMSE, verbal IQ of the WAIS-R and the SDS and number of baths. Reasons of the patients gave for less frequent bathing were that bathing was troublesome or was forgotten and that thermoregulation of bath water had become impossible.
 The results suggested that in AD patients, number of baths taken decreased with aggravation of cognitive dysfunction and that there were multiple participating factors including memory disturbance, depressive state, and, particularly, executive dysfunction.
Content from these authors
© 2012 the japanese society balneology,climatology and physical medicine
Previous article Next article
feedback
Top