RATIONALE: This study was set-up to evaluate the construct validity of three verbal memory tests in epilepsy patients. METHODS: Sixty-one consecutively evaluated patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) or extra-temporal epilepsy (E-TLE) underwent testing with the verbal learning and memory test (VLMT, the German equivalent of the Rey auditory verbal learning test, RAVLT); the California verbal learning test (CVLT); the logical memory and digit span subtests of the Wechsler memory scale, revised (WMS-R); and testing of intelligence, attention, speech and executive functions. RESULTS: Factor analysis of the memory tests resulted in test-specific rather than test over-spanning factors. Parameters of the CVLT and WMS-R, and to a much lesser degree of the VLMT, were highly correlated with attention, language function and vocabulary. Delayed recall measures of logical memory and the VLMT differentiated TLE from E-TLE. Learning and memory scores off all three tests differentiated mesial temporal sclerosis from other pathologies. A lateralization of the epilepsy was possible only for a subsample of 15 patients with mesial TLE. CONCLUSION: Although the three tests provide overlapping indicators for a temporal lobe epilepsy or a mesial pathology, they can hardly be taken in exchange. The tests have different demands on semantic processing and memory organization, and they appear differentially sensitive to performance in non-memory domains. The tests capability to lateralize appears to be poor. The findings encourage the further discussion of the dependency of memory outcomes on test selection.
RATIONALE: This study was set-up to evaluate the construct validity of three verbal memory tests in epilepsypatients. METHODS: Sixty-one consecutively evaluated patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) or extra-temporal epilepsy (E-TLE) underwent testing with the verbal learning and memory test (VLMT, the German equivalent of the Rey auditory verbal learning test, RAVLT); the California verbal learning test (CVLT); the logical memory and digit span subtests of the Wechsler memory scale, revised (WMS-R); and testing of intelligence, attention, speech and executive functions. RESULTS: Factor analysis of the memory tests resulted in test-specific rather than test over-spanning factors. Parameters of the CVLT and WMS-R, and to a much lesser degree of the VLMT, were highly correlated with attention, language function and vocabulary. Delayed recall measures of logical memory and the VLMT differentiated TLE from E-TLE. Learning and memory scores off all three tests differentiated mesial temporal sclerosis from other pathologies. A lateralization of the epilepsy was possible only for a subsample of 15 patients with mesial TLE. CONCLUSION: Although the three tests provide overlapping indicators for a temporal lobe epilepsy or a mesial pathology, they can hardly be taken in exchange. The tests have different demands on semantic processing and memory organization, and they appear differentially sensitive to performance in non-memory domains. The tests capability to lateralize appears to be poor. The findings encourage the further discussion of the dependency of memory outcomes on test selection.
Authors: Jacob A Lafo; Jacob D Jones; Michael S Okun; Russell M Bauer; Catherine C Price; Dawn Bowers Journal: Clin Neuropsychol Date: 2015-12-21 Impact factor: 3.535
Authors: Laura B Zahodne; Dawn Bowers; Catherine C Price; Russell M Bauer; Anne Nisenzon; Kelly D Foote; Michael S Okun Journal: Clin Neuropsychol Date: 2011-04 Impact factor: 3.535
Authors: Maria Stefania De Simone; Roberta Perri; Lucia Fadda; Massimo De Tollis; Chiara Stella Turchetta; Carlo Caltagirone; Giovanni Augusto Carlesimo Journal: J Neurol Date: 2017-09-25 Impact factor: 4.849
Authors: Juri-Alexander Witt; Roland Coras; Johannes Schramm; Albert J Becker; Christian E Elger; Ingmar Blümcke; Christoph Helmstaedter Journal: J Neurol Date: 2015-07-03 Impact factor: 4.849
Authors: Alkomiet Hasan; Astrid Roeh; Stefan Leucht; Berthold Langguth; Maximilian Hansbauer; Tatiana Oviedo-Salcedo; Sophie K Kirchner; Irina Papazova; Lisa Löhrs; Elias Wagner; Isabel Maurus; Wolfgang Strube; Moritz J Rossner; Michael C Wehr; Ingrid Bauer; Stephan Heres; Claudia Leucht; Peter M Kreuzer; Stephanie Zimmermann; Thomas Schneider-Axmann; Thomas Görlitz; Susanne Karch; Silvia Egert-Schwender; Beate Schossow; Philipp Rothe; Peter Falkai Journal: Contemp Clin Trials Commun Date: 2020-01-28
Authors: Ina Klinke; Martina Minnerop; Tanja Schmitz-Hübsch; Marc Hendriks; Thomas Klockgether; Ullrich Wüllner; Christoph Helmstaedter Journal: Cerebellum Date: 2010-09 Impact factor: 3.847
Authors: Sanja Nedic; Steven M Stufflebeam; Carlo Rondinoni; Tonicarlo R Velasco; Antonio C dos Santos; Joao P Leite; Ana C Gargaro; Lilianne R Mujica-Parodi; Jaime S Ide Journal: BMC Neurol Date: 2015-12-21 Impact factor: 2.474