Department of Neurology, Neuropsychology Research Centre, Catholic University of Sacred Heart, Rome, Italy.
Curr Alzheimer Res. 2011 Feb;8(1):24-31. doi: 10.2174/156720511794604552.
According to recent criteria, Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) represents a clinical condition with multiple cognitive presentations (amnesic and non amnesic) that can be supported by different types of brain lesions (mainly vascular and atrophic). In order to asses if the cognitive presentation and the rate of progression differ according to the type of brain pathology, two populations of MCI patients, characterized by hippocampal atrophy (n: 39) and vascular subcortical pathology (n: 36) respectively, on the basis of MRI findings, were investigated. Patients underwent an extensive neuropsychological test battery twice (at baseline and at two years follow-up), which is made up of the MMSE and various tests of episodic memory, short-term memory, visual-spatial abilities, executive functions, language, attention, praxis and psychomotor speed. Atrophic and vascular MCI patients showed a remarkably different pattern of impairment at the baseline. The former were significantly more impaired in episodic memory tasks. The latter were more impaired in an action naming task. At the follow up examination, the rate of progression to dementia was higher in atrophic (14/39) than in vascular (5/36) MCI patients. The comparison between neuropsychological scores obtained at the baseline and at the follow-up showed that atrophic MCI patients underwent a severe decline in several cognitive domains, whereas vascular MCI patients showed a significant decline only in those tasks requiring executive abilities. Our results confirm that a selective and severe defect of episodic memory is associated with hippocampal atrophy and that MCI patients with atrophic lesions are more likely to convert to Alzheimer's type dementia while MCI patients with vascular lesions are characterized by a slight decline in executive function over time and by a tendency to develop probable vascular forms of dementia.
根据最近的标准,轻度认知障碍(MCI)代表一种具有多种认知表现(遗忘型和非遗忘型)的临床病症,这些认知表现可以由不同类型的脑损伤(主要是血管性和萎缩性)来支持。为了评估认知表现和进展速度是否因脑病理学类型而异,根据 MRI 结果,我们研究了分别以海马萎缩(n=39)和血管性皮质下病变(n=36)为特征的两组 MCI 患者。患者接受了两次广泛的神经心理学测试(基线和两年随访),该测试由 MMSE 和各种情景记忆、短期记忆、视觉空间能力、执行功能、语言、注意力、动作和运动速度测试组成。在基线时,萎缩性和血管性 MCI 患者表现出明显不同的损伤模式。前者在情景记忆任务中明显受损更严重。后者在动作命名任务中受损更严重。在随访检查中,萎缩性 MCI 患者(14/39)向痴呆的进展率高于血管性 MCI 患者(5/36)。在基线和随访时获得的神经心理学评分之间的比较表明,萎缩性 MCI 患者在几个认知领域经历了严重的下降,而血管性 MCI 患者仅在需要执行能力的任务中表现出显著下降。我们的结果证实,情景记忆的选择性和严重缺陷与海马萎缩有关,而具有萎缩性病变的 MCI 患者更有可能转化为阿尔茨海默病型痴呆,而具有血管性病变的 MCI 患者则随着时间的推移表现出执行功能的轻微下降,并倾向于发展为可能的血管性痴呆形式。