Objective: Prior work indicates that discrete emotions are linked to performance across multiple domains of cognitive function and thus have the potential to impact cognitive profiles in neuropsychological assessment. However, reported presence and magnitude of the relationships between emotion and cognitive test performance are inconsistent. Variable findings in this regard could be due to failure to consider motivations associated with expressed emotion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: Although the most prominent symptoms of Parkinson's disease (PD) are those impacting movement, cognitive dysfunction is prevalent and often presents early in the disease process. Individuals with cognitive symptoms of PD often complete cognitive screening, making it important to identify factors associated with cognitive screening performance to ensure prompt and accurate detection of cognitive impairments.
Objective: Despite a body of research examining relationships between motor symptoms and cognitive dysfunction in PD, no prior study has undertaken a systematic review of the magnitude of the relationship between motor symptoms and cognitive screening performance in PD.
Background: Current guidelines recommend that individuals with MS are screened annually for processing speed deficits, often using the Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT). However, given the heterogeneity of cognitive deficits in individuals with MS, other screening measures that assess a range of cognitive domains are necessary. The current cross-sectional study aimed to examine the ability of the computerized, self-administered Brief Assessment of Cognitive Health (BACH) screening measure to detect the presence of cognitive impairment in adults with MS as determined by performance on a standard neuropsychological test battery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Although caregiver burden is common in the context of dementia caregiving, the caregiving role is linked to beneficial outcomes too. Individuals reporting higher positive aspects of caregiving tend to exhibit lower burden relative to those reporting few. The goal of this retrospective review of outpatient memory clinic medical records was to demonstrate whether and how constructs of burden and positive aspects of caregiving coexist within individual caregivers, and to explore potential contributors to caregiver profiles created based upon these constructs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Clin Neuropsychol
February 2024
Objective: Pain and cognitive impairment are prevalent and often co-occur in older adults. Because pain may negatively affect cognitive test performance, identification of pain in the context of neuropsychological evaluation is important. However, pain detection based on self-report presents challenges, and pain is often under-detected in this population.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Research has linked increased cognitive decline in a dementia care recipient to worsening caregiver burden, but the presence of positive aspects of caregiving is associated with better outcomes. As cognitive decline worsens, a lack of positive caregiving experiences could lead to burden for the caregiver. This study investigated relationships among dementia caregiver burden, cognitive decline, and positive aspects of caregiving in dementia, predicting an indirect effect of positive aspects of caregiving.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Feline Med Surg
January 2023
Objectives: Caregiver burden has been found in owners of seriously ill pets; however, research to date has been heavily represented by dog owners. Prior caregiver burden work has neither intentionally focused on cat owners nor been appropriately powered to examine differences in owners of cats relative to owners of dogs. We expected that owners of an ill cat would exhibit greater caregiver burden than owners of a healthy cat but lower burden than owners of an ill dog.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Agitation is a common symptom in dementia and linked to caregiver burden, but both agitation and burden are multidimensional constructs. The current study sought to determine whether specific presentations of agitation differentially relate to aspects of caregiver burden.
Methods: Medical record data from an outpatient memory clinic were extracted for 609 persons with dementia, including caregiver-reported burden and care recipient agitation.
Background: Increasing complexity of treatment plans is associated with higher levels of caregiver burden in owners of dogs with skin disease. It is possible that elevated caregiver burden resulting from treatment complexity could, in turn, affect the veterinarian-client relationship.
Hypotheses/objectives: We expected that treatment complexity, caregiver burden, and the client's perception of the veterinarian-client relationship would be related to each other.
Introduction: Functional gastrointestinal disorders such as irritable bowel syndrome are often associated with abdominal discomfort, bloating, and cramping. There is growing evidence that gastrointestinal symptoms are also related to cognitive function, but this association has not been previously examined in young adults.
Methods: We examined cross-sectional relationships between nonspecific gastrointestinal symptoms and cognition in 56 healthy young adults (41 female, 15 male) without diagnosis of gastrointestinal disorder.
Dementia (London)
January 2022
Background: Pain in older persons with dementia is both under-detected and under-managed. Family caregivers can play an important role in addressing these deficiencies by communicating their care recipient's symptoms and behaviors to medical providers, but little is known about how caregivers and providers approach pain-related discussions in the context of dementia. The goal of this study was to explore how ambulatory care providers and family caregivers of persons with dementia view pain communication.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPast research suggests relationships among dementia caregiver burden and care recipient pain and neuropsychiatric symptoms, but no prior work has examined the influence of pain self-efficacy on these associations. A sample of 502 dementia caregivers completed an online protocol assessing caregiver burden and care recipient neuropsychiatric symptoms, presence of pain, and pain self-efficacy in this cross-sectional, observational study. The indirect effect of neuropsychiatric symptoms on the relationship between pain and caregiver burden was significant.
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