Xin Zhang, Muireann Irish, Olivier Piguet, Rebekah M Ahmed
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: Longitudinal comparative characterisation of dementia syndromes may aid differential diagnosis, prognostication and intervention implementation.
Methods: We compared the behavioural and cognitive characteristics of 84 behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD), 29 left and 14 right-dominant semantic dementia (SDL and SDR) and 49 Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients over a follow-up period of 2.4 ± 1.6 years using the Cambridge Behavioural Inventory Revised (CBI-R) and Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination third edition (ACE-III).
Results: Linear mixed modelling of time effects found progression of all CBI-R domains, aside from sleep, beliefs and mood domains, and all ACE-III domains. Modelling of group effects found that bvFTD had greater symptoms than AD in most CBI-R domains. Notably, SDL and SDR compared differently with AD and bvFTD; whilst SDR did not differ significantly from bvFTD in any CBI-R domain, SDL had less severe symptoms than bvFTD in everyday skills, motivation, sleep and eating habits; whilst SDL had greater disturbances in abnormal behaviour and stereotypic behaviour than AD, SDR had greater disturbances in addition in motivation and eating habits. Motivation, eating habits, abnormal behaviour and stereotypic behaviour were the most frequently different behavioural domains between groups.
Conclusion: We have shown that the combined, longitudinal use of existing behavioural and cognitive assessments could capture distinct clinical profiles of common and rare dementia syndromes. Our findings also highlight the importance of select behavioural domains such as motivation and the usefulness of separate clinical characterisations of SDL and SDR.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Neurology is an international peer-reviewed journal which provides a source for publishing original communications and reviews on clinical neurology covering the whole field.
In addition, Letters to the Editors serve as a forum for clinical cases and the exchange of ideas which highlight important new findings. A section on Neurological progress serves to summarise the major findings in certain fields of neurology. Commentaries on new developments in clinical neuroscience, which may be commissioned or submitted, are published as editorials.
Every neurologist interested in the current diagnosis and treatment of neurological disorders needs access to the information contained in this valuable journal.