Developing and describing a typology of lucid episodes among people with Alzheimer's disease and related dementias

Author:

Griffin Joan M.12ORCID,Kim Kyungmin3,Finnie Dawn M.2,Lapid Maria I.4,Gaugler Joseph E.5,Batthyány Alexander6,Bangerter Lauren R.7,Biggar Virginia S.8,Frangiosa Theresa8

Affiliation:

1. Division of Health Care Delivery Research and Kern Center for the Science of Healthcare Delivery Mayo Clinic Rochester Minnesota USA

2. Kern Center for the Science of Healthcare Delivery Mayo Clinic Rochester Minnesota USA

3. Department of Child Development and Family Studies Research Institute of Human Ecology Seoul National University Seoul Republic of Korea

4. Department of Psychiatry and Psychology Mayo Clinic Rochester Minnesota USA

5. School of Public Health University of Minnesota Minneapolis Minnesota USA

6. Viktor Frankl Research Institute for Theoretical Psychology and Personalist Studies Pázmány Péter Catholic University Budapest Hungary

7. Health Economics and Aging Research Institute MedStar Health Research Institute Hyattsville Maryland USA

8. UsAgainstAlzheimer's Washington District of Columbia USA

Abstract

AbstractINTRODUCTIONThis study examined lucid episodes among people living with late‐stage Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (PLWD) and then developed a typology of these episodes to help characterize them.METHODSFamily caregivers of PLWD provided information about witnessed episodes, including proximity to death, cognitive status, duration, communication quality, and circumstances prior to lucid episodes on up to two episodes (caregiver N = 151; episode N = 279). Latent class analysis was used to classify and characterize empirically distinct clusters of lucid episodes.RESULTSFour lucid episode types were identified. The most common type occurred during visits with family and among PLWD who lived > 6 months after the episode. The least common type coincided with family visits and occurred within 7 days of the PLWD's death.DISCUSSIONFindings suggest that multiple types of lucid episodes exist; not all signal impending death; and some, but not all, are precipitated by external stimuli.

Funder

National Institute on Aging

Publisher

Wiley

Reference20 articles.

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