Association of subjective memory complaints with subsequent cognitive decline in community-dwelling elderly individuals with baseline cognitive impairment
OBJECTIVE: The validity of subjective memory complaints has been questioned by clinical studies that have shown little relationship between memory complaints and objective memory performance. These studies often have been cross-sectional in design, have excluded individuals with cognitive impairment...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The American journal of psychiatry 1997-05, Vol.154 (5), p.609-615 |
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Zusammenfassung: | OBJECTIVE: The validity of subjective memory complaints has been
questioned by clinical studies that have shown little relationship between
memory complaints and objective memory performance. These studies often
have been cross-sectional in design, have excluded individuals with
cognitive impairment, or have lacked a comparison group. The authors
conducted a study that attempted to avoid these limitations. METHOD: Memory
complaints of 364 nondemented, community- dwelling elderly individuals were
recorded as present or absent at the baseline evaluation. After 1 year, 169
subjects were reevaluated. Standardized neurologic and neuropsychological
evaluations were used at each assessment to classify subjects as normal or
cognitively impaired. RESULTS: At baseline, 31% of the normal subjects and
47% of those with cognitive impairment had memory complaints. Subjects with
memory complaints had higher Hamilton depression scale scores than subjects
without memory complaints but equivalent scores on a measure of total
recall. At follow-up, multivariate analyses showed that subjects with
baseline memory complaints had significantly greater decline in memory and
cognition than subjects without memory complaints. Secondary analyses
showed this effect to be confined to subjects with baseline cognitive
impairment. CONCLUSIONS: Memory complaints may lack validity in subjects
with normal cognition, but in nondemented individuals with cognitive
impairment, memory complaints may predict subsequent cognitive decline. |
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ISSN: | 0002-953X 1535-7228 |
DOI: | 10.1176/ajp.154.5.609 |