Author:
ALBERT MARILYN S.,MOSS MARK B.,TANZI RUDOLPH,JONES KENNETH
Abstract
Normals (N = 42) and patients with mild memory
difficulty (N = 123) were given a neuropsychological
test battery, and then followed annually for 3 years to
determine which individuals developed sufficient functional
change that they met clinical criteria for AD. Twenty-three
of the 123 participants with mild memory difficulty converted
to a diagnosis of probable Alzheimer's disease (AD)
within 3 years of follow-up. Four of the 20 neuropsychological
measures obtained at baseline, were useful in discriminating
the groups on the basis of their status 3 years after the
tests were given. The 4 discriminating tests pertained
to assessments of memory and executive function. When the
controls were compared to the individuals with memory impairments
who ultimately developed AD (the converters),
the accuracy of discrimination was 89%, based on the neuropsychological
measures at baseline. The discrimination of the controls
from the individuals with mild memory problems who did
not progress to the point where they met clinical criteria
for probable AD over the 3 years of follow-up (the Questionables)
was 74% and the discrimination of the questionables from
the converters was 80%. The specific tests that contributed
to these discriminations, in conjunction with recent neuropathological
and neuroimaging data from preclinical cases, have implications
for which brain regions may be affected during the prodromal
phase of AD. (JINS, 2001, 7, 631–639.)
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Neurology,Clinical Psychology,General Neuroscience
Cited by
432 articles.
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