Literature DB >> 2211974

Object-memory evaluation for prospective detection of dementia in normal functioning elderly: predictive and normative data.

P A Fuld1, D M Masur, A D Blau, H Crystal, M K Aronson.   

Abstract

In a prospective study of dementia in initially normal functioning elderly, a brief form of the Fuld Object-Memory Evaluation (OM) was administered to 474 cognitively normal community-residing volunteers aged 75-85 at baseline and annually thereafter. Seventy-two subjects later became demented. Memory test data from the last annual evaluation before cognitive change was noted were available for 56. Although the entire population recalled 7.28 (SD = 1.33) of the 10 objects on Trial 1 of the test at baseline, these 56 subjects recalled only 5.96 (SD = 1.85). When recall of 6 or fewer objects was used as a predictor, the OM test identified 32 of the 56 who subsequently became demented. Compared to an estimated base rate of 15% for dementia, the predictive value of a positive test (PV+) was 39%, and that of a negative test (PV-) was 89%. With a cutoff of 5 or fewer items recalled, the PV+ rose to 59% and the PV- was 94%. Although the OM test was only moderately sensitive to incipient dementia (.57), it was fairly specific (.84), and lowering the cutoff to 5 increased the specificity to .96. Memory testing would therefore seem to hold promise as a predictor of dementia in cognitively normal elderly.

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2211974     DOI: 10.1080/01688639008400998

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Exp Neuropsychol        ISSN: 1380-3395            Impact factor:   2.475


  33 in total

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9.  Lifespan influences on mid- to late-life cognitive function in a Chinese birth cohort.

Authors:  Z X Zhang; B L Plassman; Q Xu; G E P Zahner; B Wu; M Y Gai; H B Wen; X Chen; S Gao; D Hu; X H Xiao; Y Shen; A M Liu; T Xu
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10.  Norms from the Georgia Centenarian Study: measures of verbal abstract reasoning, fluency, memory, and motor function.

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