The purpose of this study was to assess the cross-sectional prevalence and characteristics of anxiety among patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD), as compared with patients with frontotemporal dementia (FTD), patients with vascular dementia (VaD), and normal control subjects. The authors used the anxiety subscale of the Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI), an instrument with established reliability and validity, to compare patients. Patients were identified in a query of the UCLA Alzheimer's Disease Center database and included 115 patients with probable AD, 43 patients with VaD, 33 patients with FTD, and 40 normal, elderly control subjects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFContext: Healthy elderly persons commonly show 4 types of change in brain structure-cortical atrophy, central atrophy, deep white-matter hyperintensities, and periventricular hyperintensities-as forms of subclinical structural brain disease (SSBD).
Objectives: To characterize the volumes of SSBD present with aging and to determine the associations of SSBD, physiology, and cognitive function.
Design: Cross-sectional study.
The authors examined quantitative electroencephalographc (QEEG) coherence in 37 depressed elderly patients and performed 2-year follow-up evaluations. All subjects had equivocal cognitive impairment, but none had delirium or dementia. More than 40% (16/37) recovered from depression, and 38% (14/37) remained well for 2 years.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUsing quantitative electroencephalographic coherence (a measure of synchronized electrical activity between brain regions) the authors examined heterogeneity in clinical presentation and outcome inpatients with dementia. Patients (N = 114) with mild-to-moderate dementia of the Alzheimer's type (DAT) or multi-infarct dementia (MID) were examined for coherence from the left hemisphere. More than 70% diagnostic accuracy in distinguishing between DAT and MID subjects was achieved using coherence measures alone.
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