Neuropsychological characteristics of preclinical dementia in Parkinson's disease
- 1 September 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Neurology
- Vol. 45 (9) , 1691-1696
- https://doi.org/10.1212/wnl.45.9.1691
Abstract
The goal of this study was to characterize the changes in cognition associated with the earliest, or preclinical, stages of dementia in Parkinson's disease (PD).We administered a comprehensive neuropsychological test battery to a group of initially nondemented PD patients participating in a longitudinal community-based epidemiologic study. We used Cox proportional hazards models to assess the relative risk of incident dementia associated with baseline scores on the neuropsychological tests. Baseline performance on two verbal fluency tasks (letter fluency and category fluency) was significantly and independently associated with incident dementia. Tests of memory, orientation, abstract reasoning, naming, and constructional skill were less sensitive predictors of subsequent dementia. The neuropsychological pattern characterizing the preclinical stages of dementia in PD differed from that described previously in preclinical Alzheimer's disease. Results suggest that poor performance on tests of verbal fluency may represent a distinct characteristic of the preclinical phase of dementia in PD. NEUROLOGY 1995;45: 1691-1696Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Varicella-zoster virusNeurology, 1995
- Neuropsychological detection and characterization of preclinical Alzheimer's diseaseNeurology, 1995
- Verbal fluency deficits in Parkinson's disease.Neuropsychology, 1993
- ProgramJournal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology, 1993
- Semantic fluency in Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and Huntington's disease: Dissociation of storage and retrieval failures.Neuropsychology, 1993
- Assessment [RETIRED]Neurology, 1992
- The Lewy body variant of Alzheimer's diseaseNeurology, 1990
- Differential diagnosis between radiation and tumor plexopathy of the pelvisNeurology, 1985
- Social adjustment and psychopathology among formerly hospitalized and non-hospitalized mothers—I. Development of the social role adjustment instrumentJournal of Psychiatric Research, 1975
- The early years of the American Academy of NeurologyNeurology, 1974