Aging Ment Health
March 2006
This paper reports on comparisons of patterns of responses by 199 spouses of Alzheimer disease patients to stresses of functioning as caregivers. Focusing on gender and age of spouses, we examine effects of the total burden of caregiving and perceived patient problems on a set of emotional and social responses of caregivers. We also examine ways in which depressive symptoms and anxiety of spouse caregivers were associated with patterns of their responses to caregiving stresses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlzheimer Dis Assoc Disord
January 2002
This study assessed relationships between problem behaviors in 199 Alzheimer Disease patients and vulnerability factors in the well being and emotional health of their spouse caregivers. Among caregiver wives and the younger caregiver husbands (64 years old and under) the volume of patient problem behavior was significantly negatively associated with total scores on a summary well being measure. The association was not found within the older husband caregiver group.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThese findings support the hypothesis that a frontal-subcortical abnormality is necessary to produce symptoms of depression (e.g., mood-related signs, behavioral disturbances, neurovegetative signs) in dementia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Geriatr Psychiatry Neurol
June 1994
We investigated memory self-report in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and age-associated memory impairment (AAMI). AD and AAMI patients and healthy elderly subjects were administered a self-report memory questionnaire, memory tests, a family-rated memory questionnaire, and a depression scale. The AD group reported worse memory than the control group, but many individual AD subjects reported normal memory.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAccelerated forgetting of name-face associations and grocery list items within the first hour postpresentation is demonstrated in 80 persons with Alzheimer's disease (AD) compared to 80 control subjects matched on age, education, and gender. Differences in forgetting which exceeded statistical regression effects remained, even when AD and control subjects were matched on rate of acquisition during the learning trials of name-face associations. Results are discussed in relation to the neuropathology of AD, organic amnestic disorders, and methodological factors concerning previous research on forgetting in persons with AD.
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