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Screening of dementia indicating signs in adults with intellectual disabilities

Maria Arvio, Nina Bjelogrlic‐Laakso

2021Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In intellectual disability, the cognitive delay is observed during developmental age, whereas in dementia, cognitive decline occurs during post-developmental period. So far, the risk of dementia in people with intellectual disability, excluding those with Down syndrome, is poorly known. METHOD: We screened dementia signs in a study group of 230 adults (34-80 years of age) with the help of the British Present Psychiatric State-Learning Disabilities assessment. RESULTS: Of the study members, 42% showed two or more signs. The overall frequency of symptoms did not differ between age groups. The number of individuals with a genetic syndrome or disease manifesting with a shortened lifespan was greater in the younger age groups when compared to the older age groups. CONCLUSION: People with an intellectual disability represent numerous rare syndromes with comorbidities. It seems that dementia signs may affect any age groups of adults with intellectual disability.

Topics & Concepts

DementiaIntellectual disabilityDown syndromeAffect (linguistics)Cognitive declineLearning disabilityPsychologyCognitionDiseaseGerontologyCognitive impairmentBorderline intellectual functioningPsychiatryMedicineClinical psychologyDevelopmental psychologyInternal medicineCommunicationDown syndrome and intellectual disability researchGenetics and Neurodevelopmental DisordersWilliams Syndrome Research
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