Smith Elaina, Cortez Christopher, Wiechmann April, Davis Sandra, Dyson Hannah, Kucharski Krystyn, Ross Sarah, Kline Geoffrey, Mallet Robert T, Shi Xiangrong
Department of Pharmacology and Neuroscience, University of North Texas Health Science Center, Fort Worth, TX, United States.
Department of Internal Medicine, University of North Texas Health Science Center, Fort Worth, TX, United States.
Front Aging Neurosci. 2025 Mar 19;17:1560791. doi: 10.3389/fnagi.2025.1560791. eCollection 2025.
The impact of amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI) on short-term memory (STM) and learning performance assessed with different memory modalities was unknown. This study examined differences in STM and learning ability between verbal and visuospatial memory-modalities in older adults with aMCI.
Thirty-nine aMCI subjects (71.5 ± 6.0 yrs) and 33 non-MCI (control) subjects (71.1 ± 5.7 yrs) of similar age and educational attainment consented to participate in the study. Short-term memory was assessed using Digit-Span-Test (DST), California-Verbal-Learning-Test-2nd edition - short-form (CVLT-II), and Brief-Visuospatial-Memory-Test-Revised (BVMT-R); CVLT-II and BVMT-R assessed verbal-and visuospatial-learning, respectively.
DST-Backward ( = 0.016) and DST-Sequencing ( < 0.001) scores were significantly lower in the aMCI vs. control subjects (Student's t-test), but DST-Forward scores did not differ ( = 0.237). Immediate and delayed free-recall scores in both CVLT-II ( < 0.001) and BVMT-R ( < 0.001) were lower in the aMCI subjects. The immediate free-recall scores in both tests improved with repeated trials (two-factor ANOVA: < 0.001 for trial factor) to similar extents in the aMCI and control groups with no significant interaction of the trial and group factors ( = 0.266 in CVLT-II and = 0.239 in BVMT-R).
Amnestic MCI subjects have diminished STM but intact learning ability. Differences in STM of older adults with vs. without aMCI are more readily distinguished by word-verbal memory and/or visuospatial memory testing than digit-verbal memory testing.
遗忘型轻度认知障碍(aMCI)对不同记忆方式评估的短期记忆(STM)和学习表现的影响尚不清楚。本研究调查了患有aMCI的老年人在言语和视觉空间记忆方式之间的STM和学习能力差异。
39名aMCI受试者(71.5±6.0岁)和33名年龄和教育程度相近的非MCI(对照)受试者(71.1±5.7岁)同意参与本研究。使用数字广度测试(DST)、加州言语学习测试第二版简版(CVLT-II)和修订版简短视觉空间记忆测试(BVMT-R)评估短期记忆;CVLT-II和BVMT-R分别评估言语和视觉空间学习能力。
与对照受试者相比,aMCI受试者的DST逆向(P = 0.016)和DST排序(P < 0.001)得分显著更低(学生t检验),但DST正向得分无差异(P = 0.237)。aMCI受试者的CVLT-II(P < 0.001)和BVMT-R(P < 0.001)的即时和延迟自由回忆得分均更低。在两项测试中,即时自由回忆得分均随着重复试验而提高(双因素方差分析:试验因素P < 0.001),在aMCI组和对照组中提高程度相似,试验因素和组因素无显著交互作用(CVLT-II中P = 0.266,BVMT-R中P = 0.239)。
遗忘型MCI受试者的STM减退,但学习能力完好。与数字言语记忆测试相比,通过单词言语记忆和/或视觉空间记忆测试能更轻易地区分有和没有aMCI的老年人在STM方面的差异。