Executive dysfunction can explain word‐list learning disability in very mild Alzheimer's disease: The Tajiri Project

Elderly people with questionable dementia (i.e. a Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR) of 0.5) have been focused on as representing the borderline zone condition between healthy people and dementia patients. Many of them are known to have pathologic traits of very mild Alzheimer's disease (AD). Altho...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychiatry and clinical neurosciences 2004-02, Vol.58 (1), p.54-60
Hauptverfasser: HASHIMOTO, RYUSAKU, MEGURO, KENICHI, YAMAGUCHI, SATOSHI, ISHIZAKI, JUNICHI, ISHII, HIROSHI, MEGURO, MITSUE, SEKITA, YASUYOSHI
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container_issue 1
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container_title Psychiatry and clinical neurosciences
container_volume 58
creator HASHIMOTO, RYUSAKU
MEGURO, KENICHI
YAMAGUCHI, SATOSHI
ISHIZAKI, JUNICHI
ISHII, HIROSHI
MEGURO, MITSUE
SEKITA, YASUYOSHI
description Elderly people with questionable dementia (i.e. a Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR) of 0.5) have been focused on as representing the borderline zone condition between healthy people and dementia patients. Many of them are known to have pathologic traits of very mild Alzheimer's disease (AD). Although they present mild memory disorder, the underlying mechanism has not been fully investigated. Herein is reported the mechanism of learning disability in very mild AD. Eighty‐six CDR 0.5 participants and 101 age‐ and education‐matched healthy controls (CDR 0) were randomly selected from a community in the town of Tajiri, Miyagi Prefecture. The word‐recall task of the Alzheimer Disease Assessment Scale–Japanese (i.e. learning and recall of 10 words) was administered. The numbers of words recalled in each trial and those never recalled throughout the trials were compared for the two CDR groups. The serial‐position function was depicted for three parts (i.e. primary, middle, and recency). The CDR 0.5 group recalled significantly fewer words than the CDR 0 group. The number of never‐recalled words was greater in the CDR 0.5 group. A remarkable difference was found in the middle part of the word list. The number of never‐recalled words of the CDR 0.5 group was greater in the middle part. The large number of never‐recalled words accounted for the poor learning performance of very mild AD participants. The results suggested that very mild AD participants have difficulty in learning and retaining words in the middle part of the word‐list because of a functional decline of the central executive system.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1440-1819.2004.01193.x
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subjects Aged
Aging - psychology
Alzheimer Disease - complications
Alzheimer Disease - psychology
Alzheimer’s
Biological and medical sciences
Case-Control Studies
CDR 0.5
Cognition
disease
executive function
Female
Geriatrics
Humans
Learning Disorders - etiology
Learning Disorders - physiopathology
Male
Medical sciences
memory
Memory Disorders - etiology
Memory Disorders - physiopathology
Mental Recall
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Semantics
word‐list learning
title Executive dysfunction can explain word‐list learning disability in very mild Alzheimer's disease: The Tajiri Project
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