Wadley Virginia G, Okonkwo Ozioma, Crowe Michael, Ross-Meadows Lesley A
Department of Medicine and Alzheimer's Disease Research Center, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL 35294-2041, USA.
Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2008 May;16(5):416-24. doi: 10.1097/JGP.0b013e31816b7303.
Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) may involve subtle functional losses that are not detected with typical self- or informant-report assessments of daily function. Information about the nature of functional difficulties in MCI can be used to augment common clinical assessment procedures, and aspects of function that are affected in MCI can serve as meaningful endpoints for intervention trials.
Cross-sectional case and comparison group study.
University medical center.
Fifty participants with MCI and 59 cognitively normal participants.
The authors compared the groups on dimensions of both speed and accuracy in performing instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs), using a standardized Timed IADL measure that evaluates five functional domains commonly encountered in everyday life (telephone use, locating nutrition information on food labels, financial abilities, grocery shopping, medication management).
Across Timed IADL domains, MCI participants demonstrated accuracy comparable with cognitively normal participants but took significantly longer to complete the functional activities, controlling for depressive symptoms (p< 0.001). Slower performance was demonstrated in each discrete domain except financial abilities.
These results suggest that slower speed of task performance is an important component and perhaps an early marker of functional change in MCI that would not be detected using traditional measurements of daily function. Future research should address the question of whether performance-based functional measures, as well as simple queries regarding whether functional activities take longer than usual to complete, may improve the prediction of future cognitive decline and disease progression among those individuals in whom MCI represents impending dementia.
轻度认知障碍(MCI)可能涉及一些细微的功能丧失,而这些丧失在日常功能的典型自我报告或知情者报告评估中无法检测到。有关MCI中功能困难性质的信息可用于加强常见的临床评估程序,并且MCI中受影响的功能方面可作为干预试验中有意义的终点。
横断面病例对照研究。
大学医学中心。
50名MCI参与者和59名认知正常的参与者。
作者使用标准化的定时日常生活工具性活动(IADL)测量方法,比较了两组在执行IADL时的速度和准确性维度,该测量方法评估了日常生活中常见的五个功能领域(电话使用、在食品标签上查找营养信息、财务能力、杂货店购物、药物管理)。
在定时IADL各领域中,MCI参与者表现出与认知正常参与者相当的准确性,但在控制抑郁症状后,完成功能活动所需的时间明显更长(p<0.001)。除财务能力外,每个独立领域的表现都较慢。
这些结果表明,任务执行速度较慢是MCI功能变化的一个重要组成部分,也许是一个早期标志,而使用传统的日常功能测量方法无法检测到这一点。未来的研究应解决基于表现的功能测量方法,以及关于功能活动完成时间是否比平时更长的简单询问,是否可以改善对那些MCI预示着即将发生痴呆的个体未来认知衰退和疾病进展的预测这一问题。