Author:
Diniz Breno S. O.,Yassuda Monica S.,Nunes Paula V.,Radanovic Marcia,Forlenza Orestes V.
Abstract
Background: Diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and its subtypes requires a detailed diagnostic assessment and so may be missed at routine primary-care appointments, since the ordinary dementia screening tests lack sensitivity owing to ceiling effects, especially in highly educated subjects.Methods: The study was undertaken using a cross-sectional assessment of 112 elderly subjects (mean age 67.96 ± 5.77 years, and mean education level of 12.8 ± 5.7 years) with a semi-structured interview and a neuropsychological battery.Results: MCI patients did not differ from controls on total MMSE scores (p = 0.212). Nevertheless, MCI patients showed worse performance than controls on the verbal memory task (p = 0.012), and “drawing a pentagon” (p = 0.03). Amnestic MCI patients performed worse only on the “three-word recall” task (p = 0.013); non-amnestic MCI patients performed worse on the “three-stage command” task (p = 0.001); and multiple-domain MCI patients performed worse on the “drawing a pentagon” task (p = 0.001) and had a trend toward performing poorly on the ‘three word recall’ task (p = 0.06).Conclusion: The analysis of MMSE subtest scores, in addition to MMSE total scores, may increase the sensitivity of the MMSE test in screening for MCI and its subtypes.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology,Clinical Psychology
Cited by
116 articles.
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