9 research outputs found

    Desorientação topográfica na doença de Alzheimer

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    Topographical disorientation (TD) has not been as extensively studied as other frequent manifestations of Alzheimer's disease (AD). OBJECTIVE: To verify the occurrence of TD and to identify the neuropsychological dysfunctions associated with TD in AD. METHOD: Thirty patients with probable AD, their caregivers and 30 subjects without dementia (controls) were interviewed with a questionnaire and evaluated with tests related to topographical orientation. RESULTS: AD patients, even those with mild dementia, differ from controls in the questionnaire on topographical orientation and in most neuropsychological tests except for tests of spatial working memory, point localization, three dimension and nonsense figure copy. When the performances in the neuropsychological tests of patients with mild or moderate dementia were compared, only landmark recognition and route description were more impaired in moderate dementia. CONCLUSION: TD occurs even in mild dementia of AD, a finding apparently not explained by the impairments of more elementary spatial functions.Desorientação topográfica (DT) não tem sido tão exaustivamente estudada quanto outros sintomas frequentes da doença de Alzheimer (DA). OBJETIVO: Verificar a ocorrência de DT e identificar as disfunções neuropsicológicas associadas com a DT na DA. Método: Trinta pacientes com DA provável, seus cuidadores e trinta sujeitos sem demência (controles) foram entrevistados com um questionário e testes relacionados à orientação topográfica. RESULTADOS: Pacientes com DA, mesmo aqueles com demência leve, diferiram dos controles no questionário de orientação topográfica e na maioria dos testes neuropsicológicos, exceto nos testes memória operacional espacial, localização de pontos, cópia de figuras sem sentido e de figura em três dimensões. Quando os desempenhos de pacientes com demência leve ou moderada foram comparados, apenas os testes de reconhecimento de marcos e descrição de rotas foram mais comprometidos na demência moderada. CONCLUSÃO: DT ocorre mesmo na demência leve da DA, um achado aparentemente não explicado pelo comprometimento das funções espaciais mais elementares

    Topographic disorientation in Alzheimer´s disease

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    Introdução: a desorientação topográfica é um sintoma comum em pacientes com doença de Alzheimer (DA), no entanto não tem tão estudada quanto outros sintomas da DA. Objetivos: Verificar a ocorrência da desorientação topográfica em pacientes com DA e identificar quais transtornos neuropsicológicos estão relacionados com a desorientação. Métodos: Foram avaliados vinte e sete pacientes com DA provável (12 do sexo feminino, 14 com DA com demência de leve intensidade) e 30 indivíduos controles sem demência (21 do sexo feminino). Os pacientes foram submetidos a um questionário específico sobre orientação topográfica e foram submetidos aos seguintes testes: Mini Exame do Estado Mental, extensão de dígitos, fluência verbal, teste de cancelamento, teste dos blocos de Corsi, localização de pontos no espaço, julgamento de orientação de linhas, cópia de figuras em três dimensões e figuras sem sentido e testes de rotação mental. Foram realizados testes de reconhecimento de marcos topográficos, orientação pessoal, descrição de rotas, localização de cidade no mapa do Brasil. Resultados: Pacientes e controles não apresentaram diferença quanto à escolaridade e gênero. Houve diferença entre pacientes e controles no questionário sobre orientação topográfica e em todos os testes utilizados, exceto nas tarefas de funções vísuo-espaciais. O grupo de pacientes com demência de leve intensidade demonstrou diferença no questionário sobre orientação topográfica, descrição de rotas, reconhecimento de marcos topográficos, orientação espacial julgamento de orientação de linhas e localização de cidades no mapa. Apenas o reconhecimento de marcos topográficos, foi capaz de diferenciar entre pacientes com demência de leve ou de moderada intensidade. Conclusões: O questionário sobre orientação topográfica demonstrou que até mesmo os pacientes com DA com demência de leve intensidade tiveram desorientação topográfica. Os testes de reconhecimento de marcos topográficos, xi orientação pessoal egocêntrica e alocêntrica, estão alterados precocemente e podem contribuir para a desorientação topográfica, A memória operacional espacial e as funções visuo-espaciais não estão comprometidas inicialmente e provavelmente não contribuíram para a desorientação topográfica em pacientes com demência de leve intensidade. No entanto, pacientes com demência de intensidade moderada demonstraram comprometimento nas tarefas de memória operacional especial e testes de funções vísuoespaciais, o que provavelmente contribuiu para a desorientação topográfica nestes pacientesBackground: Topographical disorientation is a common symptom in patients with Alzheimer´s disease (AD) that has not been as extensively studied as other common manifestations of this disease. Objective: To verify the occurrence of topographical disorientation in patients with Alzheimer\'s disease (AD) and to identify which neuropsychological dysfunctions are causally related to the presence of this manifestation. Methods: Twenty seven patients meeting criteria for probable AD (12 female, 14 with mild dementia) and 30 subjects (21 female) without dementia were analyzed. The subjects and the caregivers were interviewed with a questionnaire on topographical orientation. The following tests were given: Mini mental state examination (MMSE), digit span, verbal fluency, cancellation task, Corsi\'s block tapping test, point localization, line orientation judgment, three dimension and nonsense figure copy and mental rotation tests. Landmarks recognition, personal orientation, recalling routes were tested in a descriptive task and geographic knowledge was evaluated with a Brazilian map. Results: Patients and control subjects were not different regarding schooling years and gender. There were differences between patients and controls in the questionnaire on topographical orientation and in all tests except in visual spatial tasks. Patients with mild dementia had difference in the questionnaire, recalling routes, landmark recognition, personal orientation, geographical knowledge and line orientation judgment. Only the landmark recognition test was found to differentiate between patients with mild or moderate dementia. Conclusions: The topographic orientation questionnaire showed that even in mild dementia, AD patients have topographical disorientation. The landmark recognition, self-centered and world-centered orientation were precociously affected and may contribute for topographical disorientation. Spatial working memory and spatial visual functions are not compromised initially and xiii probably did not contribute for topographical disorientation in the patients with mild dementia. However, patients with moderate dementia showed impairment in spatial working memory and spatial visual tests, which may have contributed to the topographic disorientation of these patient

    Topographic disorientation in Alzheimer´s disease

    No full text
    Introdução: a desorientação topográfica é um sintoma comum em pacientes com doença de Alzheimer (DA), no entanto não tem tão estudada quanto outros sintomas da DA. Objetivos: Verificar a ocorrência da desorientação topográfica em pacientes com DA e identificar quais transtornos neuropsicológicos estão relacionados com a desorientação. Métodos: Foram avaliados vinte e sete pacientes com DA provável (12 do sexo feminino, 14 com DA com demência de leve intensidade) e 30 indivíduos controles sem demência (21 do sexo feminino). Os pacientes foram submetidos a um questionário específico sobre orientação topográfica e foram submetidos aos seguintes testes: Mini Exame do Estado Mental, extensão de dígitos, fluência verbal, teste de cancelamento, teste dos blocos de Corsi, localização de pontos no espaço, julgamento de orientação de linhas, cópia de figuras em três dimensões e figuras sem sentido e testes de rotação mental. Foram realizados testes de reconhecimento de marcos topográficos, orientação pessoal, descrição de rotas, localização de cidade no mapa do Brasil. Resultados: Pacientes e controles não apresentaram diferença quanto à escolaridade e gênero. Houve diferença entre pacientes e controles no questionário sobre orientação topográfica e em todos os testes utilizados, exceto nas tarefas de funções vísuo-espaciais. O grupo de pacientes com demência de leve intensidade demonstrou diferença no questionário sobre orientação topográfica, descrição de rotas, reconhecimento de marcos topográficos, orientação espacial julgamento de orientação de linhas e localização de cidades no mapa. Apenas o reconhecimento de marcos topográficos, foi capaz de diferenciar entre pacientes com demência de leve ou de moderada intensidade. Conclusões: O questionário sobre orientação topográfica demonstrou que até mesmo os pacientes com DA com demência de leve intensidade tiveram desorientação topográfica. Os testes de reconhecimento de marcos topográficos, xi orientação pessoal egocêntrica e alocêntrica, estão alterados precocemente e podem contribuir para a desorientação topográfica, A memória operacional espacial e as funções visuo-espaciais não estão comprometidas inicialmente e provavelmente não contribuíram para a desorientação topográfica em pacientes com demência de leve intensidade. No entanto, pacientes com demência de intensidade moderada demonstraram comprometimento nas tarefas de memória operacional especial e testes de funções vísuoespaciais, o que provavelmente contribuiu para a desorientação topográfica nestes pacientesBackground: Topographical disorientation is a common symptom in patients with Alzheimer´s disease (AD) that has not been as extensively studied as other common manifestations of this disease. Objective: To verify the occurrence of topographical disorientation in patients with Alzheimer\'s disease (AD) and to identify which neuropsychological dysfunctions are causally related to the presence of this manifestation. Methods: Twenty seven patients meeting criteria for probable AD (12 female, 14 with mild dementia) and 30 subjects (21 female) without dementia were analyzed. The subjects and the caregivers were interviewed with a questionnaire on topographical orientation. The following tests were given: Mini mental state examination (MMSE), digit span, verbal fluency, cancellation task, Corsi\'s block tapping test, point localization, line orientation judgment, three dimension and nonsense figure copy and mental rotation tests. Landmarks recognition, personal orientation, recalling routes were tested in a descriptive task and geographic knowledge was evaluated with a Brazilian map. Results: Patients and control subjects were not different regarding schooling years and gender. There were differences between patients and controls in the questionnaire on topographical orientation and in all tests except in visual spatial tasks. Patients with mild dementia had difference in the questionnaire, recalling routes, landmark recognition, personal orientation, geographical knowledge and line orientation judgment. Only the landmark recognition test was found to differentiate between patients with mild or moderate dementia. Conclusions: The topographic orientation questionnaire showed that even in mild dementia, AD patients have topographical disorientation. The landmark recognition, self-centered and world-centered orientation were precociously affected and may contribute for topographical disorientation. Spatial working memory and spatial visual functions are not compromised initially and xiii probably did not contribute for topographical disorientation in the patients with mild dementia. However, patients with moderate dementia showed impairment in spatial working memory and spatial visual tests, which may have contributed to the topographic disorientation of these patient

    Spatial working memory in Alzheimer's disease: A study using the Corsi block-tapping test

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    Abstract The Corsi block-tapping test was developed as a non-verbal task to measure spatial memory. In this test, cubes are tapped by the examiner in novel sequences of increasing length after which participants are required to reproduce each sequence immediately. Objectives: To evaluate spatial working memory in Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients. Methods: 30 elderly control subjects (21 women, 9 men) and 30 patients with probable Alzheimer's disease (15 women and 15 men), with 8 or more years of schooling, were evaluated with the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), digit span and Corsi block-tapping test. Proportions were compared using Chi-Square, and continuous variables with the Mann-Whitney tests. Results: AD patients were older than controls (p=0.014), but there were no differences regarding gender or educational level between these groups. The performance on the Corsi block-tapping test differed between AD and control individuals (p=0.010), and between patients with moderate dementia and controls (p=0.032), but not between control individuals and patients with mild dementia (p=0.090). Conclusions: In the present study, AD patients with moderate dementia showed impairment in spatial working memory while those with mild dementia did not. This finding may be due to the relatively small sample size, but it is also possible that spatial memory may be normal in the initial (limbic) phase of AD

    Brain glucose metabolism and gray matter volume in retired professional soccer players : a cross-sectional [ 18 F]FDG-PET/MRI study

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    Professional soccer athletes are exposed to repetitive head impacts and are at risk of developing chronic traumatic encephalopathy. Objective To evaluate regional brain glucose metabolism (rBGM) and gray matter (GM) volume in retired soccer players (RSPs). Male RSPs and age and sex-matched controls prospectively enrolled between 2017 and 2019 underwent neurological and neuropsychological evaluations, brain MRI and [18F]FDG-PET in a 3.0-Tesla PET/MRI scanner. Visual analysis was performed by a blinded neuroradiologist and a blinded nuclear physician. Regional brain glucose metabolism and GM volume were assessed using SPM8 software. Groups were compared using appropriate statistical tests available at SPM8 and R. Nineteen RSPs (median [IQR]: 62 [50-64.5] years old) and 20 controls (60 [48-73] years old) were included. Retired soccer players performed worse on mini-mental state examination, digit span, clock drawing, phonemic and semantic verbal fluency tests, and had reduced rBGM in the left temporal pole (pFDR = 0.008) and the anterior left middle temporal gyrus (pFDR = 0.043). Semantic verbal fluency correlated with rBGM in the right hippocampus, left temporal pole, and posterior left middle temporal gyrus (p ≤ 0.042). Gray matter volume reduction was observed in similar anatomic regions but was less extensive and did not survive correction for multiple comparisons (pFDR ≥ 0.085). Individual [18F]FDG-PET visual analysis revealed seven RSPs with overt hypometabolism in the medial and lateral temporal lobes, frontal lobes, and temporoparietal regions. Retired soccer players had a higher prevalence of septum pellucidum abnormalities on MRI. Retired soccer players had reduced rBGM and GM volume in the temporal lobes and septum pellucidum abnormalities, findings possibly related to repetitive head impacts

    Brain glucose metabolism and gray matter volume in retired professional soccer players: a cross-sectional [18F]FDG-PET/MRI study

    No full text
    Background Professional soccer athletes are exposed to repetitive head impacts and are at risk of developing chronic traumatic encephalopathy. Objective To evaluate regional brain glucose metabolism (rBGM) and gray matter (GM) volume in retired soccer players (RSPs). Methods Male RSPs and age and sex-matched controls prospectively enrolled between 2017 and 2019 underwent neurological and neuropsychological evaluations, brain MRI and [18F]FDG-PET in a 3.0-Tesla PET/MRI scanner. Visual analysis was performed by a blinded neuroradiologist and a blinded nuclear physician. Regional brain glucose metabolism and GM volume were assessed using SPM8 software. Groups were compared using appropriate statistical tests available at SPM8 and R. Results Nineteen RSPs (median [IQR]: 62 [50–64.5] years old) and 20 controls (60 [48–73] years old) were included. Retired soccer players performed worse on mini-mental state examination, digit span, clock drawing, phonemic and semantic verbal fluency tests, and had reduced rBGM in the left temporal pole (pFDR = 0.008) and the anterior left middle temporal gyrus (pFDR = 0.043). Semantic verbal fluency correlated with rBGM in the right hippocampus, left temporal pole, and posterior left middle temporal gyrus (p ≤ 0.042). Gray matter volume reduction was observed in similar anatomic regions but was less extensive and did not survive correction for multiple comparisons (pFDR ≥ 0.085). Individual [18F]FDG-PET visual analysis revealed seven RSPs with overt hypometabolism in the medial and lateral temporal lobes, frontal lobes, and temporoparietal regions. Retired soccer players had a higher prevalence of septum pellucidum abnormalities on MRI. Conclusion Retired soccer players had reduced rBGM and GM volume in the temporal lobes and septum pellucidum abnormalities, findings possibly related to repetitive head impacts
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