Literature DB >> 27866203

Frontal Assessment Battery as a Useful Tool to Differentiate Mild Cognitive Impairment due to Subcortical Ischemic Vascular Disease from Alzheimer Disease.

Yen-Hsuan Hsu1, Ching-Feng Huang, Chung-Ping Lo, Tzu-Lan Wang, Chi-Cheng Yang, Min-Chien Tu.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Prominent executive dysfunction can differentiate vascular dementia from Alzheimer disease (AD). However, it is unclear whether the Frontal Assessment Battery (FAB) screening tool can differentiate subcortical ischemic vascular disease (SIVD) from AD at the pre-dementia stage. In addition, the neural correlates of FAB performance have yet to be clarified.
METHODS: Patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) due to SIVD (MCI-V), MCI due to AD (MCI-A), and demographically matched controls completed the Mini-Mental State Examination, Taiwanese FAB (TFAB), Category Fluency, and Chinese Version of the Verbal Learning Test, and underwent magnetic resonance imaging. White matter hyperintensities were rated according to the Scheltens scale.
RESULTS: TFAB total scale and its Orthographical Fluency subtest were the only measures that could differentiate MCI-V from MCI-A. Discriminative analysis showed that Orthographical Fluency scores successfully identified 73.2% of the cases with MCI-V, with 85.0% sensitivity. Orthographical Fluency scores were specifically associated with lesion load within frontal periventricular, frontal deep white matter, and basal ganglia regions.
CONCLUSION: The TFAB, and especially its 1-min Orthographical Fluency subtest, is a useful screening procedure to differentiate MCI due to SIVD from MCI due to AD. The discriminative ability is probably due to frontosubcortical white matter pathologies disproportionately involved in the two disease entities.
© 2016 S. Karger AG, Basel.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27866203     DOI: 10.1159/000452762

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord        ISSN: 1420-8008            Impact factor:   2.959


  6 in total

1.  Frontal Assessment Battery in Early Cognitive Impairment: Psychometric Property and Factor Structure.

Authors:  W Y Goh; D Chan; N B Ali; A P Chew; A Chuo; M Chan; W S Lim
Journal:  J Nutr Health Aging       Date:  2019       Impact factor: 4.075

2.  Cognitive impairment in sporadic cerebral small vessel disease: A systematic review and meta-analysis.

Authors:  Olivia K L Hamilton; Ellen V Backhouse; Esther Janssen; Angela C C Jochems; Caragh Maher; Tuula E Ritakari; Anna J Stevenson; Lihua Xia; Ian J Deary; Joanna M Wardlaw
Journal:  Alzheimers Dement       Date:  2020-11-13       Impact factor: 16.655

Review 3.  Update on Vascular Cognitive Impairment Associated with Subcortical Small-Vessel Disease.

Authors:  Anders Wallin; Gustavo C Román; Margaret Esiri; Petronella Kettunen; Johan Svensson; George P Paraskevas; Elisabeth Kapaki
Journal:  J Alzheimers Dis       Date:  2018       Impact factor: 4.472

4.  Exosomal MicroRNAs Contribute to Cognitive Impairment in Hypertensive Patients by Decreasing Frontal Cerebrovascular Reactivity.

Authors:  Junyi Ma; Xiang Cao; Fangyu Chen; Qing Ye; Ruomeng Qin; Yue Cheng; Xiaolei Zhu; Yun Xu
Journal:  Front Neurosci       Date:  2021-03-01       Impact factor: 4.677

5.  Diagnosis of Subcortical Ischemic Vascular Cognitive Impairment With No Dementia Using Radiomics of Cerebral Cortex and Subcortical Nuclei in High-Resolution T1-Weighted MR Imaging.

Authors:  Bo Liu; Shan Meng; Jie Cheng; Yan Zeng; Daiquan Zhou; Xiaojuan Deng; Lianqin Kuang; Xiaojia Wu; Lin Tang; Haolin Wang; Huan Liu; Chen Liu; Chuanming Li
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2022-04-08       Impact factor: 5.738

6.  Contribution of diffusion, perfusion and functional MRI to the disconnection hypothesis in subcortical vascular cognitive impairment.

Authors:  Qing Ye; Feng Bai
Journal:  Stroke Vasc Neurol       Date:  2018-02-28
  6 in total

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