| Literature DB >> 26251110 |
Sharpley Hsieh1, Jashelle Caga2, Felicity V C Leslie3, Marlene Shibata3, Naomi Daveson3, David Foxe3, Eleanor Ramsey2, Patricia Lillo4, Rebekah M Ahmed5, Emma Devenney5, James R Burrell6, John R Hodges7, Matthew C Kiernan2, Eneida Mioshi8.
Abstract
Brief screening tools that detect and differentiate patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal dementia (ALSFTD) from those more subtle cognitive or behavioral symptoms (ALS plus) and motor symptoms only (ALS pure) is pertinent in a clinical setting. The utility of 2 validated and data-driven tests (Mini-Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination [M-ACE] and Motor Neuron Disease Behavioral Scale [MiND-B]) was investigated in 70 ALS patients (24 ALSFTD, 19 ALS plus, and 27 ALS pure). More than 90% of patients with ALSFTD scored at or below the cutoff on the M-ACE, whereas this was seen in only about 20% of ALS patients without dementia. The MiND-B differentiated between ALS pure and ALS plus diagnostic categories. Rasch modeling of M-ACE and MiND-B items revealed early cognitive (fluency, memory recall) and behavioral (apathy) symptoms in ALSFTD. The combined use of the M-ACE and MiND-B detects patients with ALSFTD, differentiates along the ALS continuum, and offers insight into the progression of nonmotor symptomatology in ALSFTD.Entities:
Keywords: amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; behavioral disturbance; cognitive screening; frontotemporal dementia
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26251110 DOI: 10.1177/0891988715598232
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Geriatr Psychiatry Neurol ISSN: 0891-9887 Impact factor: 2.680