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Cognitive tests aid in clinical differentiation of Alzheimer's disease versus Alzheimer's disease with Lewy body disease: Evidence from a pathological study

Martina Azar, Silvia Chapman, Yian Gu, James B. Leverenz, Yaakov Stern, Stephanie Cosentino

2020Alzheimer s & Dementia24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Clinical differentiation between Alzheimer's disease (AD) and AD with Lewy body disease (LBD) is relatively imprecise. The current study examined pathologically confirmed group differences in neuropsychological functioning, and the classification ability of specific tests. METHODS: analyses examined group differences in neuropsychological performance. Binary logistic regressions examined predictive utility of specific tests for pathological diagnosis. RESULTS: Individuals with AD had better visuoconstruction (P = .006), phonemic fluency (P = .08), and processing speed than AD plus LBD (P = .013). No differences were found in memory, naming, semantic fluency, or set-switching. Processing speed and visuoconstruction predicted pathologic group (P = .03). DISCUSSION: Processing speed and visuoconstruction predicted postmortem diagnosis of AD versus AD plus LBD. Current results offer guidance in the selection and interpretation of neuropsychological tests to be used in the differential diagnosis of early dementia.

Topics & Concepts

Lewy bodyNeuropsychologyPsychologyPathologicalDementiaAlzheimer's diseaseVerbal fluency testEpisodic memoryDiseaseDementia with Lewy bodiesMedical diagnosisNeuropsychological testCognitionAudiologyNeuropsychological assessmentPathologyMedicinePsychiatryDementia and Cognitive Impairment ResearchAlzheimer's disease research and treatmentsCancer-related cognitive impairment studies
Cognitive tests aid in clinical differentiation of Alzheimer's disease versus Alzheimer's disease with Lewy body disease: Evidence from a pathological study | Litcius