| Literature DB >> 25246795 |
Noor Kamal Al-Qazzaz1, Sawal Hamid Ali2, Siti Anom Ahmad3, Shabiul Islam4.
Abstract
The early detection of poststroke dementia (PSD) is important for medical practitioners to customize patient treatment programs based on cognitive consequences and disease severity progression. The aim is to diagnose and detect brain degenerative disorders as early as possible to help stroke survivors obtain early treatment benefits before significant mental impairment occurs. Neuropsychological assessments are widely used to assess cognitive decline following a stroke diagnosis. This study reviews the function of the available neuropsychological assessments in the early detection of PSD, particularly vascular dementia (VaD). The review starts from cognitive impairment and dementia prevalence, followed by PSD types and the cognitive spectrum. Finally, the most usable neuropsychological assessments to detect VaD were identified. This study was performed through a PubMed and ScienceDirect database search spanning the last 10 years with the following keywords: "post-stroke"; "dementia"; "neuro-psychological"; and "assessments". This study focuses on assessing VaD patients on the basis of their stroke risk factors and cognitive function within the first 3 months after stroke onset. The search strategy yielded 535 articles. After application of inclusion and exclusion criteria, only five articles were considered. A manual search was performed and yielded 14 articles. Twelve articles were included in the study design and seven articles were associated with early dementia detection. This review may provide a means to identify the role of neuropsychological assessments as early PSD detection tests.Entities:
Keywords: early dementia detection; neuropsychological assessments; poststroke dementia; vascular dementia
Year: 2014 PMID: 25246795 PMCID: PMC4168871 DOI: 10.2147/NDT.S68443
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Cognition domain and function
| Domain | Function related to domain |
|---|---|
| Attention | Focusing, sustain, selective, alternative, divided, shifting |
| Executive function Memory | Planning, organizing thoughts, inhibition, control Recall and recognition of visual and verbal information |
| Visuospatial ability Language | Visual search, drawing, concentration Expressive (Broca’s aphasia), receptive (Wernicke’s aphasia) |
Figure 1VCI spectrum and dementia.
Abbreviations: VCI, vascular cognitive impairment; MCI, mild cognitive impairment.
Figure 2Flowchart of the literature search and selection process.
Studies investigating the associations between stroke, cognitive impairments, and neuropsychological assessments within 3 months of stroke onset
| Author (year) | Stroke characteristics (patients’ demography) | Risk factors | Cognitive impairment associated with PSD | Neuropsychological tests and cognitive decline evaluation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tham et al | N=252 TIA (N=140 intact; age: 56.7 years; N=102 CIND, age: 65.1 years; N=10, D, age: 60.4 years) M/F =66/34 | Hypertension, previous stroke, hyperlipidemia, diabetes, ischemic heart disease | Attention, language, verbal memory, visual memory, visuoconstruction, visuomotor speed | Tests: MMSE; WMS-R; CDT; WAIS; digital cancellation task; digital symbol modalities test; maze task; picture recall; mBNT; auditory detection test. Evaluation: subject classified by DSM-IV; MMSE score: 27.4 for intact, 23.5 for CI, 17.0 for D |
| Auchus et al | N=125 VaD; N=12 SSID, age: 69 years; M/F =58/41 | Hypertension, myocardial infarction, diabetes mellitus | Attention, language (naming and verbal fluency), verbal memory (recall and recognition), visual memory (recall and recognition), and visuoconstruction | Tests: attention, language (naming and verbal fluency); verbal memory (recall and recognition); visual memory (recall and recognition); and visuoconstruction; together with the MMSE and screening for depression. |
| Garrett et al | N=26 VaD, age: 77.1 years, M/F =66/34; N=18, VCIND, age: 78.4 years, M/F =56/29. | CVD | Visual memory, verbal fluency, verbal list-learning and memory abilities | Tests: TMT part A and B; CVLT; BNT; COWAT; MMSE; and CDR. |
| Mok | N=75 patients, age: 71 years, M/F =41.5/58.5; N=42 control, age: 69.6 years, M/F =47/48 | Diabetes, previous stroke, hyperlipidemia, heart disease, smoking, alcohol use | Memory, thinking (decision making or answering questions), orientation (in time, place, or person), aphasia, and speech comprehension | Tests: CDR; MMSE; MDRS; IQCODE. |
| Graham et al | N=19 subcortical VaD, age: 71.2 years, M/F =73.6/26; N=19 AD, age: 68.9 years, M/F =47.3/52.6; N=19 controls, age: 68.1 years, M/F =47.3/52.6 | CVD | Episodic and semantic memory, executive/attentional functioning, and visuospatial and perceptual skills | Tests: MMSE; ACE-R; CDR; CBI. |
| Sachdev et al | N=123 patients, age: 72 years, M/F =39.7/40.7; N=78 control, age: 70.6 years, M/F =43.9/44.9 | Hypertension, diabetes, AF, CAD hyperlipidemia, smoking, alcohol use | Attention, global memory, verbal memory, visual memory, executive, abstraction, working memory, language, visuoconstruction | Tests: MMSE; WMS-R; BNT, WAIS-R; TMT part A and B; HAM-D; IQCODE. |
| Firbank et al | N=79 patients (N=65 ND, age: 80.1 years, M/F =50/50; N=14 D, age: 80 years, M/F =64/35) | CVD | Medial temporal lobe atrophy associated with cognitive decline and brain atrophy, increasing the suggested role for AD | Tests: CAMCOG-R; MMSE; Sheffield language screening test. |
| Mok et al | N=61 patients, age: 68.7 years, M/F =53/47; N=35 control, age: 68.9 years, M/F =37.1/62.9 | Hypertension, diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, heart disease, smoking, alcohol use | Verbal learning and memory, orientation, language, praxis and visuospatial functions, verbal fluency, and verbal, motor, and graphomotor programming | Test: MMSE. |
| Stebbins et al | N=91 patients (N=51 NCI, age: 63.1 years, M/F =52/47; N=40 cognitive impairment, age: 67.4 years, M/F =47/52) | CVD | Orientation, attention, working memory, language, visuospatial, psychomotor, memory | Tests: IQCODE; MMSE; digital forward; WMS-R; digital backward; BNT; BDAE; animal naming; figure recognition test; Raven’s matrices; grooved pegs domain; symbol digital oral score; CLTR. |
| Jaillard et al | N=177 patients, age: 50.6, M/F =62.3/36.7; N=81 control, age: 51.9 years, M/F =58/42 | Hypertension, diabetes mellitus, admission glycemia, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, smoking, alcohol use, homocysteine | Short-term memory, episodic memory, executive function, working memory | Tests: MMSE; WAIS. |
| Khedr et al | N=81 patients (N=17 D, age: 65.5±9.2 years, M/F =64/35; N=64 ND, age: 56.9±5.3 years, M/F =67/32 | Hypertension, homocysteine level, smoking, CVD | Orientation, repetition of words, attention, calculation, recall of words, language, visual construction | Tests: IQCODE; MMSE; WMS-R; CASI. |
| Kandiah et al | N=97 NCI, age: 53 years, M/F =71/29; N=48 CI, age: 61 years, M/F =40/60 | Hypertension, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia | Executive function, memory, visuospatial | Tests: MMSE; MoCA; FAB; IQCODE. |
Notes: M/F values were represented as percentages. Age is given as the average age in years.
Abbreviations: PSD, poststroke dementia; N, number of patients; TIA, transient ischemic attack; CIND, cognitive impairment no dementia; D, dementia; M, male; F, female; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination; WMS-R, Wechsler Memory Scale-Revised; CDT, Clock Diagnostic Test; WAIS, Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale; mBNT, modified Boston Naming Test; DSM-IV, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Revised, fourth edition; CI, cognitively impaired; VaD, vascular dementia; SSID, strategic single infarct dementia; NINDS–AIREN, National Institute of Neurologic Disorders and Stroke and the Association International pour la Recherche et l’Enseignement en Neurosciences; DSM-III-R, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Revised, third edition; VCIND, vascular cognitive impairment no dementia; CVD, cerebrovascular disease; TMT, Trail Making Test; CVLT, California Verbal Learning Test; BNT, Boston Naming Test; COWAT, Control Oral World Association Test; CDR, Clinical Dementia Rating Scale; DSM-III, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, third edition; MDRS, Mattis Dementia Rating Scale; IQCODE, Informant Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline of Elderly; NIHSS, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale; BI, Barthel Index; IADL, instrumental activity of daily living; ACE-R, Addenbrooke’s Cognitive Examination; CBI, Cambridge Behavioral Inventory; AD, Alzheimer’s disease; AF, atrial fibrillation; CAD, coronary artery disease; WAIS-R, Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-Revised; Ham-D, Hamilton Depression Rating Scale; ADL, activity of daily living; ND, no dementia; CAMCOG-R, Cambridge Assessment of Mental Disorders in Elderly, Revised; OCSP, Oxfordshire Community Stroke Project; ADAS-cog, Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale–Cognitive Subset; NCI, noncognitive impairment; BDAE, Boston Diagnostic Aphasia Examination; CLTR, Control Learning and Enhancing Recall; CASI, Cognitive Abilities Screening Instrument; MoCA, Montreal Cognitive Assessment; FAB, Frontal Assessment Battery; DSM-IV-TR, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fourth edition, text revision.
Studies presenting the limitations in poststroke memory assessment
| Study/year | Stroke characteristics of patients | Neuropsychological tests |
|---|---|---|
| Cao et al | N=40 patients, age: 37.8 years, M/F =37/62; N=40 control, age: 38.8 years, M/F =40/60 | MMSE, AVLT, DST, Token test, linguistic tasks, SVF, BNT, Cori’s block-tapping board, similarities, RPM, SDS |
| Yoshida et al | N=126 patients (N=62 control, age: 66.7±10.1 years, M/F =48/51.6; N=13 MCI, age: 62.7±12.3 years, M/F =46/53.8; N=65 AD, age: 74.1±7.8 years, M/F =26/73.8; N=24 FTD, age: 61.8±9.1 years, M/F =54/45; N=11 DLB, age: 75.5±5 years, M/F =27/72; N=28 VaD, age: 73.4±9.8 years, M/F =69/30) | ACE, MMSE, CDR |
| Bour et al | N=194 patients, age: 68.3 years, M/F =55.2/44.8 | MMSE, MAAS, CAMCOG, GIT, SCWT, CST, AVLT |
| Dong et al | N=100 patients, age: 61.2±11.3 years, M/F =62/38 | MMSE, MoCA, IQCODE |
| Pendlebury | N=91 ND patients, age: 73.4 years, M/F =56/44; N=39 MCI patients | MoCA, ACE-R, MMSE, TMT parts A and B, SDMT, BNT, Rey–Osterrieth complex figure, HVLT, GDS |
| Sikaroodi et al | N=50 patients, age: 51.8±13.18 years, M/F =32/68 | MMSE, MoCA |
| Raimondi et al | N=83 patients (N=26 control, age: 73.23 years, M/F =50/50; N=25 AD, age: 77.64 years, M/F =40/60; N=32 VaD, age: 75.59 years, M/F =50/50) | CDR, BDI-II, MMSE, ACE-R |
Notes: M/F values were represented as percentages. Age is given as the average age in years.
Abbreviations: N, number of patients; M, male; F, female; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination; AVLT, Auditory–Verbal Learning Test; DST, Digital Span Test; SVF, Semantic Verbal Fluency; BNT, Boston Naming Test; RPM, Raven’s Progressive Matrices; SDS, Self-Rating Depression Scale; MCI, mild cognitive impairment; AD, Alzheimer’s disease; FTD, frontotemporal dementia; DLB, dementia Lewy body; VaD, vascular dementia; ACE, Addenbrooke’s Cognitive Examination; CDR, Clinical Dementia Rating Scale; MAAS, Maastricht aging study; CAMCOG, Cambridge Assessment of Mental Disorders in Elderly; GIT, Groninger Intelligence Test; SCWT, Stroop Color Word Test; CST, Concept Shifting Test; MoCA, Montreal Cognitive Assessment; IQCODE, Informant Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline of Elderly; ND, no dementia; ACE-R, Addenbrooke’s Cognitive Examination, Revised; TMT, Trail Making Test; SDMT, Symbol Digit Modalities Test; HVLT, Hopkins Verbal Learning Test; GDS, Geriatric Depression Scale; BDI-II, Beck Depression Inventory II.