Graham N L, Emery T, Hodges J R
University of Cambridge Neurology Unit, Addenbrooke's Hospital, and MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, 15 Chaucer Rd, Cambridge, UK.
J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 2004 Jan;75(1):61-71.
There are inconsistencies in published reports regarding the profile of cognitive impairments in vascular dementia, and its differentiation from Alzheimer's disease.
To identify the overall profile of cognitive impairment in subcortical vascular dementia as compared with Alzheimer's disease; and the tests which best discriminate between these groups.
57 subjects participated: 19 with subcortical vascular dementia, 19 with Alzheimer's disease, and 19 controls. The dementia groups were matched for age, education, and general levels of cognitive and everyday functioning. Subcortical vascular dementia was defined by clinical features (prominent vascular risk factors plus a previous history of transient ischaemic events or focal neurological signs) and substantial white matter pathology on magnetic resonance imaging. All subjects were given a battery of 33 tests assessing episodic and semantic memory, executive/attentional functioning, and visuospatial and perceptual skills.
Despite a minimal degree of overall dementia, both patient groups had impairments in all cognitive domains. The Alzheimer patients were more impaired than those with vascular dementia on episodic memory, while the patients with vascular dementia were more impaired on semantic memory, executive/attentional functioning, and visuospatial and perceptual skills. Logistic regression analyses showed that the two groups could be discriminated with 89% accuracy on the basis of two tests, the WAIS logical memory--delayed recall test and a silhouette naming test.
Subcortical vascular dementia and Alzheimer's disease produce distinctive profiles of cognitive impairment which can act as an adjunct to diagnosis. Many of the neuropsychological deficits thought to characterise Alzheimer's disease are also found in subcortical vascular dementia.
已发表的关于血管性痴呆认知障碍特征及其与阿尔茨海默病鉴别的报告存在不一致之处。
确定与阿尔茨海默病相比,皮质下血管性痴呆认知障碍的总体特征;以及最能区分这两组的测试。
57名受试者参与研究:19名患有皮质下血管性痴呆,19名患有阿尔茨海默病,19名作为对照。痴呆组在年龄、教育程度以及认知和日常功能的总体水平上进行了匹配。皮质下血管性痴呆由临床特征(显著的血管危险因素加上既往短暂性脑缺血发作史或局灶性神经体征)和磁共振成像上明显的白质病变定义。所有受试者都接受了一系列33项测试,以评估情景记忆和语义记忆、执行/注意力功能以及视觉空间和感知技能。
尽管总体痴呆程度较轻,但两组患者在所有认知领域均有损伤。阿尔茨海默病患者在情景记忆方面的损伤比血管性痴呆患者更严重,而血管性痴呆患者在语义记忆、执行/注意力功能以及视觉空间和感知技能方面的损伤更严重。逻辑回归分析表明,基于两项测试,即韦氏成人智力量表逻辑记忆——延迟回忆测试和轮廓命名测试,两组的区分准确率可达89%。
皮质下血管性痴呆和阿尔茨海默病产生独特的认知障碍特征,可作为诊断的辅助手段。许多被认为是阿尔茨海默病特征的神经心理学缺陷在皮质下血管性痴呆中也有发现。