Friends, family detect Alzheimer’s better than conventional tests

By ANI
Tuesday, September 28, 2010

WASHINGTON - Family members and close friends are better at detecting Alzheimer’s than conventional methods, says a new study.

Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis validated Ascertain Dementia 8 by checking to see if it could highlight individuals who had biological indicators, or biomarkers, for Alzheimer’s disease, such as abnormal levels of certain factors in the spinal fluid or positive brain scans for Alzheimer’s plaques.

“The AD8 gives us a brief and very low-cost alternative that takes a few minutes of the informant’s time to screen for dementia and thus identify those individuals who need follow-up evaluations to determine if there truly are signs of Alzheimer’s,” said John C. Morris.

Traditional early-stage dementia screening tools only give a snapshot of a person’s cognitive abilities at one point in time - when they’re being tested.

In the current study, informants are asked to rate the following areas:

Reduced interest in hobbies and other activities

Repeating of questions, stories or statements

Forgetting the month or year

Difficulty handling complicated financial affairs, such as balancing a chequebook

Difficulty remembering appointments

“These informants can give us the retrospective perspective we need to know that a person’s mental abilities have begun to meaningfully decline, indicating that additional testing is needed,” Morris said.

“Based on our results, the AD8 appears to be superior to conventional testing in its ability to detect signs of early dementia. It can’t tell us whether the dementia is caused by Alzheimer’s or other disorders, but it lets us know when there’s a need for more extensive evaluations to answer that question,” Morris said.

The study is published online in the journal Brain. (ANI)

Filed under: Science and Technology

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