Mansueti Laura, de Frias Cindy M, Bub Daniel, Dixon Roger A
University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, 2University of Victoria, Victoria, BC, Canada.
Neuropsychol Dev Cogn B Aging Neuropsychol Cogn. 2008 Sep;15(5):545-73. doi: 10.1080/13825580701858216.
Relatively little systematic information is available regarding patterns of cognitive effects of mild stroke in older adults. We explored this problem with a series of two independent samples from the Victoria Longitudinal Study data archives. In Study 1, self-reported mild stroke and neurologically intact matched controls were (a) confirmed as similar on a set of neurocognitive speed, basic cognition, and awareness indicators, and (b) compared for differences on a set of episodic, semantic, and working memory tasks. The mild stroke group was selectively worse on the language intensive story memory task. This effect was partially attributable to a deficit in remembering the most thematic information. Study 2 closely replicated these procedures and results. In addition, Study 2 follow-up analyses, comparing provisional right-hemisphere damaged and left-hemisphere damaged (LHD) participants, revealed that the thematic story memory deficit for mild stroke participants could be due to the selective impairment of LHD participants.
关于老年人轻度中风认知影响模式的系统性信息相对较少。我们利用维多利亚纵向研究数据档案中的两个独立样本系列对这一问题进行了探究。在研究1中,自我报告有轻度中风的参与者和神经功能正常的匹配对照组,(a)在一组神经认知速度、基本认知和意识指标上被确认为相似,(b)在一组情景记忆、语义记忆和工作记忆任务上进行差异比较。轻度中风组在语言密集型故事记忆任务上表现出选择性较差。这种影响部分归因于在记忆最具主题性的信息方面存在缺陷。研究2紧密重复了这些程序和结果。此外,研究2的后续分析比较了临时确定的右半球受损和左半球受损(LHD)参与者,结果显示轻度中风参与者的主题故事记忆缺陷可能是由于LHD参与者的选择性损伤所致。