Marson D, Harrell L
Department of Neurology, Alzheimer's Disease Center, and Center for Aging, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL 35294, USA.
Semin Clin Neuropsychiatry. 1999 Jan;4(1):41-9. doi: 10.1053/SCNP00400041.
Loss of medical decision making capacity (competency) is an inevitable consequence of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and is an important subject for neuropsychological investigation. Consent capacity involves a complex set of comprehension, encoding, information processing, decision making, and communication abilities, which ultimately must have an explicit neurological basis. This article examines the role of executive dysfunction in loss of consent capacity in patients with AD. The authors first describe a cognitive neuropsychological model for understanding loss of consent capacity in AD. The article also reviews neuropsychological studies that have used a psychometric instrument to test consent capacity under different legal standards (Capacity to Consent to Treatment Instrument). These studies indicate that when multiple cognitive functions are associated with declining competency of AD patients on the Capacity to Consent to Treatment Instrument legal standards, measures of simple executive function are the predominant predictors. These empirical findings are discussed and related to the conceptual model. The findings support the growing body of literature linking frontal neural systems and executive cognitive functions to competency and to higher order functional capacities.
丧失医疗决策能力(行为能力)是阿尔茨海默病(AD)不可避免的后果,也是神经心理学研究的重要课题。同意能力涉及一系列复杂的理解、编码、信息处理、决策和沟通能力,而这些能力最终必须有明确的神经学基础。本文探讨了执行功能障碍在AD患者同意能力丧失中的作用。作者首先描述了一个用于理解AD患者同意能力丧失的认知神经心理学模型。本文还回顾了一些神经心理学研究,这些研究使用心理测量工具在不同法律标准下测试同意能力(《治疗同意能力量表》)。这些研究表明,当多种认知功能与AD患者在《治疗同意能力量表》法律标准下能力下降相关时,简单执行功能的测量是主要预测因素。本文对这些实证研究结果进行了讨论,并将其与概念模型相关联。这些研究结果支持了越来越多的文献,这些文献将额叶神经系统和执行认知功能与行为能力及更高层次的功能能力联系起来。