M F Folstein
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Publication
Journal: Journal of Psychiatric Research
February/29/1976
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Publication
Journal: JAMA - Journal of the American Medical Association
May/24/1993
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To report the distribution of Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) scores by age and educational level.
METHODS
National Institute of Mental Health Epidemiologic Catchment Area Program surveys conducted between 1980 and 1984.
METHODS
Community populations in New Haven, Conn; Baltimore, Md; St Louis, Mo; Durham, NC; and Los Angeles, Calif.
METHODS
A total of 18,056 adult participants selected by probability sampling within census tracts and households.
METHODS
Summary scores for the MMSE are given in the form of mean, median, and percentile distributions specific for age and educational level.
RESULTS
The MMSE scores were related to both age and educational level. There was an inverse relationship between MMSE scores and age, ranging from a median of 29 for those 18 to 24 years of age, to 25 for individuals 80 years of age and older. The median MMSE score was 29 for individuals with at least 9 years of schooling, 26 for those with 5 to 8 years of schooling, and 22 for those with 0 to 4 years of schooling.
CONCLUSIONS
Cognitive performance as measured by the MMSE varies within the population by age and education. The cause of this variation has yet to be determined. Mini-Mental State Examination scores should be used to identify current cognitive difficulties and not to make formal diagnoses. The results presented should prove to be useful to clinicians who wish to compare an individual patient's MMSE scores with a population reference group and to researchers making plans for new studies in which cognitive status is a variable of interest.
Publication
Journal: Archives of general psychiatry
July/28/1983
Publication
Journal: Psychopharmacology Bulletin
June/27/1989
Publication
Journal: Psychological Medicine
September/9/1982
Abstract
With a psychiatrist's standardized clinical diagnosis as the criterion, the 'Mini-Mental State' Examination (MMSE) was 87% sensitive and 82% specific in detecting dementia and delirium among hospital patients on a general medical ward. The false positive ratio was 39% and the false negative ratio was 5%. All false positives had less than 9 years of education; many were 60 years of age or older. Performance on specific MMSE items was related to education or age. These findings confirm the MMSE's value as a screen instrument for dementia and delirium when later, more intensive diagnostic enquiry is possible; they reinforce earlier suggestions that the MMSE alone cannot yield a diagnosis for these conditions.
Publication
Journal: Psychological Medicine
February/10/1974
Publication
Journal: Neurology
February/9/1995
Abstract
We reviewed the records of 210 patients in the Johns Hopkins Alzheimer's Disease Research Center to evaluate the role of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) on clinical features and progression of the disease. We compared patients taking NSAIDs or aspirin on a daily basis (N = 32) to non-NSAID patients (N = 177) on clinical, cognitive, and psychiatric measures. The NSAID group had a significantly shorter duration of illness at study entry. Even after controlling for this difference, the NSAID group performed better on the Mini-Mental State Examination, Boston Naming Test, and the delayed condition of the Benton Visual Retention Test. Furthermore, analysis of longitudinal changes over 1 year revealed less decline among NSAID patients than among non-NSAID patients on measures of verbal fluency, spatial recognition, and orientation. These findings support other recent studies suggesting that NSAIDs may serve a protective role in Alzheimer's disease.
Publication
Journal: Neurology
January/14/2010
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Vitamin D deficiency has potential adverse effects on neurocognitive health and subcortical function. However, no studies have examined the association between vitamin D status, dementia, and cranial MRI indicators of cerebrovascular disease (CVD).
METHODS
Cross-sectional investigation of 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D], dementia, and MRI measures of CVD in elders receiving home care (aged 65-99 years) from 2003 to 2007.
RESULTS
Among 318 participants, the mean age was 73.5 +/- 8.1 years, 231 (72.6%) were women, and 109 (34.3%) were black. 25(OH)D concentrations were deficient (<10 ng/mL) in 14.5% and insufficient (10-20 ng/mL) in 44.3% of participants. There were 76 participants (23.9%) with dementia, 41 of which were classified as probable AD. Mean 25(OH)D concentrations were lower in subjects with dementia (16.8 vs 20.0 ng/mL, p < 0.01). There was a higher prevalence of dementia among participants with 25(OH)D insufficiency (< or =20 ng/mL) (30.5% vs 14.5%, p < 0.01). 25(OH)D deficiency was associated with increased white matter hyperintensity volume (4.9 vs 2.9 mL, p < 0.01), grade (3.0 vs 2.2, p = 0.04), and prevalence of large vessel infarcts (10.1% vs 6.9%, p < 0.01). After adjustment for age, race, sex, body mass index, and education, 25(OH)D insufficiency (< or =20 ng/mL) was associated with more than twice the odds of all-cause dementia (odds ratio [OR] = 2.3, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.2-4.2), Alzheimer disease (OR = 2.5, 95% CI 1.1-6.1), and stroke (with and without dementia symptoms) (OR = 2.0, 95% CI 1.0-4.0).
CONCLUSIONS
Vitamin D insufficiency and deficiency was associated with all-cause dementia, Alzheimer disease, stroke (with and without dementia symptoms), and MRI indicators of cerebrovascular disease. These findings suggest a potential vasculoprotective role of vitamin D.
Publication
Journal: JAMA - Journal of the American Medical Association
March/12/1991
Abstract
To determine the prevalence rates of major depressive disorder and of depressive symptoms and their relationship to mortality in nursing homes, research psychiatrists examined 454 consecutive new admissions and followed them up longitudinally for 1 year. Major depressive disorder occurred in 12.6% and 18.1% had depressive symptoms; the majority of cases were unrecognized by nursing home physicians and were untreated. Major depressive disorder, but not depressive symptoms, was a risk factor for mortality over 1 year independent of selected physical health measures and increased the likelihood of death by 59%. Because depression is a prevalent and treatable condition associated with increased mortality, recognition and treatment in nursing homes is imperative.
Publication
Journal: Archives of ophthalmology (Chicago, Ill. : 1960)
April/13/1994
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
Assessment of the relationship between visual function and functional status/quality of life in clinical research involving patients with eye disease by investigating whether the scores of four existing functional status/quality of life patient questionnaires are sensitive to differences in visual acuity and studying whether selected subscales of the questionnaires provide similar information concerning the relationship between functional status/quality of life and visual acuity as do the respective full-length questionnaires.
METHODS
Case patients consisted of 86 consecutive patients seen at The Wilmer Ophthalmological Institute Retinal Vascular Center, Baltimore, Md. Controls consisted of 51 individuals with normal visual acuity and no known ocular disease and were frequency-matched to the case patients by age (+/- 5 years), sex, and race. Subjects were interviewed in person using each of the following questionnaires: the Sickness Impact Profile, the vision-specific Sickness Impact Profile, the Community Disability Scale, and the General Health Questionnaire.
RESULTS
Scores of all four questionnaires and their subscales were significantly associated with visual acuity. The vision-specific Sickness Impact Profile and the Community Disability Scale were independently significant predictors of visual acuity. Regression analysis revealed that in our study, selected subscales of the respective full-length questionnaires were able to demonstrate the association between vision and functional status/quality of life.
CONCLUSIONS
Ophthalmic patients are at high risk for decreased functional status/quality of life. Subscales of existing questionnaires potentially may be substituted for the full-length questionnaires, thereby increasing the efficiency of functional status/quality of life measurement in such patients.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry
February/22/1978
Abstract
In an effort to discern whether cerebral vascular injuries provoke specific emotional disturbances, 20 consecutively admitted stroke patients were compared with 10 orthopaedic patients. Both groups were examined for functional disabilities (Activities of Daily Living) and for psychiatric symptoms. Reliable and valid instruments, the Hamilton Rating Scale, the Visual Analogue Mood Scale, the Present State Exam, and the Mini-Mental State Exam were employed to display the psychopathology. More of stroke patients than orthopaedic patients were depressed (45% versus 10%) even though the level of functional disability in both groups were the same. Patients with right hemisphere stroke seemed particularly vulnerable and and displayed a syndrome of irritability, loss of interest, and difficulty in concentration, in addition to depression of mood (70% of right hemisphere stroke patients versus 0% left hemisphere stroke patients and 0% orthopaedic patients). We conclude that mood disorder is a more specific complication of stroke than simply a response to the motor disability. We suggest that a controlled trial of antidepressant medication is indicated for patients with this complication.
Publication
Journal: Annals of Neurology
November/14/1988
Abstract
Neuronal loss and the presence of neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) within aminergic nuclei were examined in a series of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD). Neuromelanin-containing neurons within the locus ceruleus and large nucleolus-containing neurons within the dorsal raphe nucleus and the central superior (raphe) nucleus were counted in 25 patients with AD and in 12 age-matched control subjects. Numbers of NFTs were quantified in the same regions. Counts were compared with clinical data, including psychiatric evaluations, available for 21 of the patients with AD. Within the locus ceruleus in the patients with AD, abnormalities were more severe at mid level than at caudal or rostral levels (p less than 0.01). Within the dorsal raphe nucleus, neuronal loss was most severe caudally (p less than 0.05). NFTs, but not neuronal loss, were demonstrated within the central superior nucleus. Neuronal and NFT counts did not correlate at individual levels; the relative severity of both pathological processes was consistent from level to level within nuclei but was less consistent between nuclei. Neuronal loss correlated inversely with age, particularly within the locus ceruleus. Duration of disease correlated inversely with counts of NFTs, particularly within the dorsal raphe nucleus, implying a correlation between NFT counts and rate of progression of disease as all but 3 patients had severe dementia. Significantly, patients with AD complicated by major depression had fewer neurons at the mid level of the locus ceruleus and at the rostral level of the central superior nucleus in comparison with nondepressed patients. There was a trend suggesting greater loss of neurons at all levels of the locus ceruleus and dorsal raphe nucleus in depressed individuals.
Publication
Journal: Archives of neurology
January/2/1995
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To assess interrater reliability and validity of NINCDS-ADRDA (National Institute of Neurological and Communicative Diseases and Stroke/Alzheimer's Disease and Related Disorders Association) criteria for Alzheimer's disease (AD).
METHODS
A multisite reliability and validity study in which clinicians from each site diagnosed 60 case summaries yielding a preconsensus estimate of reliability and validity. A consensus conference was conducted for each disagreement, leading to a postconsensus estimate of validity. The criterion standard was a diagnosis of AD by autopsy.
METHODS
Three academic medical centers.
METHODS
A convenience sample of 60 detailed case summaries, 40 with AD and 20 with other dementing disorders.
METHODS
The kappa coefficient, sensitivity, and specificity.
RESULTS
The kappa coefficient for preconsensus agreement on a diagnosis of probable or possible AD vs non-AD was 0.51; the sensitivity of a diagnosis of probable or possible AD for a pathological diagnosis of AD was 0.81, and the specificity was 0.73. The postconsensus sensitivity was 0.83, and the specificity was 0.84.
CONCLUSIONS
The results support the reliability and validity of NINCDS-ADRDA criteria and show that the consensus process may improve diagnostic accuracy. The cases are reviewed with a focus on the sources of diagnostic disagreements and errors and possible changes that might improve the accuracy of the criteria.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry and Neurology
July/19/1993
Abstract
This study examined the prevalence of memory complaint and poor memory performance on brief screening measures within a community sample of 810 adults. All individuals received an extensive household interview and a clinical psychiatric evaluation. Overall, 22% indicated that they currently had trouble with their memory. This percentage increased with age, rising to 43% for those 65 to 74 years old, 51% for those 75 to 84 years old, and 88% for those 85 years of age and older; the percentage indicating memory problems decreased with educational attainment. The prevalence of poor memory performance was 11%, also increasing with less education and increased age, rising to 26% for those 65 to 74 years old and to 40% for those older then 75. Those who complained of memory trouble were twice as likely to show poor memory performance (29%) compared with those who did not complain (15%). Multivariate analysis found age, emotional distress, and physical illness to be independent predictors of memory complaint; age, functional disability, education, and physical illnesses proved to be independently associated with poor memory performance. A higher prevalence of complaints of memory trouble was found not only for those with affective disorders, as might be expected, but also among those with schizophrenic, cognitive, anxiety, and adjustment disorders. However, only individuals with cognitive disorders showed a higher prevalence of poor memory performance.
Publication
Journal: Archives of neurology
June/28/1993
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To determine the contribution of genetic factors to cognitive functioning in older men.
METHODS
Cognitive testing by telephone interview in an epidemiologically defined population.
METHODS
2077 monozygotic and 2225 dizygotic male twin pairs, all between the ages of 62 and 73 years, recruited from the National Academy of Sciences twin registry.
METHODS
The Telephone Interview for Cognitive Status--Modified total score and factor scores were analyzed. The Falconer heritability statistic and maximum likelihood estimates of genetic and environmental components were computed.
RESULTS
Heritability of the total Telephone Interview for Cognitive Status--Modified score was estimated to be 30%. Shared environmental effects accounted for an additional 18% of the variance; most of this was related to years of education. Of the four cognitive factors derived, the language/attention factor had the highest heritability estimate.
CONCLUSIONS
Genetic factors and educational achievement together account for almost half of the variance in the cognitive functioning of older men. Studies of the genetics of dementing illnesses need to consider the degree to which cognitive capacities are themselves under genetic control.
Publication
Journal: Psychological Medicine
November/22/1983
Abstract
Major affective disorder clinically similar to the disorder found in conditions other than Huntington's Disease (HD) was found in 41% of patients with HD in a consecutive case series ascertained through multiple sources in a defined geographical area. The association appears to be confined to certain families, and affective disorder may appear as long as 20 years before the onset of chorea and dementia. The association may represent genetic heterogeneity in HD.
Publication
Journal: The Lancet
November/21/1981
Abstract
Drugs with anticholinegic effects are often used in surgical procedures and may impair higher cognitive functions and produce delirious states. This prospective study examined the relation between serum levels of anticholinergic drugs, measured by a radioreceptor assay, and the development of delirium in patients undergoing cardiac surgery. Most patients who had postoperative delirium had high serum levels of anticholinergic drugs, whereas those who remained cognitively intact had low levels; and impairment in cortical function correlated with serum levels of anticholinergic drugs (p less than 0.001). Raised serum levels of drugs with anticholinergic effects may contribute to the development of delirium, and to the increase in risk of morbidity following cardiac surgery.
Publication
Journal: American Journal of Psychiatry
July/20/1998
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
The purpose of this pilot study was to gain information about attitudes of individuals with bipolar disorder and their spouses toward some of the ethical and social issues arising from rapidly advancing genetic research on bipolar disorder.
METHODS
Patients with bipolar disorder and their unaffected spouses were asked to answer questionnaires assessing their knowledge and attitudes about treatment response rates for bipolar disorder, probability of inheritance, genetic testing, disclosure of genetic information, abortion, marriage, and child-bearing.
RESULTS
The overwhelming majority of the patients and spouses said that they would take advantage of genetic tests for bipolar disorder if such tests were to become available. Most patients and spouses agreed that the benefits of knowing whether one carries a gene for bipolar disorder would outweigh the risks. The decisive majority of respondents also felt that they would not abort a fetus that carried a gene for bipolar disorder. Furthermore, most patients and spouses agreed that the knowledge that one of them carried a gene for bipolar disorder would not have deterred them from marriage or childbearing.
CONCLUSIONS
The results of this study suggest that most individuals believe that they would benefit from the use of genetic testing for bipolar disorder if it were to become available. Follow-up studies using a broader patient sample and nonclinical control groups would be useful in further evaluating the issues addressed in this pilot study.
Publication
Journal: Journal of the American Geriatrics Society
February/7/1996
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To evaluate the efficacy of a dementia care program to reduce behavior disorders in nursing home patients with dementia.
METHODS
Randomized controlled clinical trial with 6-month follow-up.
METHODS
A 250-bed community nursing home.
METHODS
The nursing home was screened to identify patients with dementia and behavior disorders. A total of 118 patients were eligible for randomization. Of these, 89 (75.4%) were randomized, and 81 of these (91.0%) completed the trial.
METHODS
The A.G.E. dementia care program consisted of Activities, Guidelines for psychotropic medications, and Educational rounds. The control treatment was usual nursing home care.
METHODS
Behavior disorders, antipsychotic drug and physical restraint use, patient activity levels, and cognitive and functional status.
RESULTS
After 6 months, 12 of 42 (28.6%) intervention patients exhibited behavior disorders compared with 20 of 39 (51.3%) controls (OR = 0.38; 95% CI [0.15, 0.95]; P = .037). Controls were more than twice as likely to receive antipsychotics (OR = 2.55, 95% CI [0.96, 6.76]; P < .056), to be restrained during activity times (OR = 2.98, 95% CI [1.10, 8.04]; P < .028), and to be restrained on nursing units (OR = 2.14, 95% CI [0.9, 5.3]; P < .10). Intervention patients were much more likely to participate in activities (OR = 13.71; 95% CI [4.51, 41.73]; P = .001).
CONCLUSIONS
The A.G.E. program reduces the prevalence of behavior disorders and the use of antipsychotic drugs and restraints. It is practical, feasible, and appears to improve the lives of patients with dementia in nursing homes.
Publication
Journal: Hospital & community psychiatry
June/3/1992
Abstract
The Hopkins Competency Assessment Test (HCAT), a brief instrument for evaluating the competency of patients to give informed consent or write advance directives, consists of a short essay and a questionnaire for determining patients' understanding of the essay. In a study to validate the instrument, 41 medical and psychiatric inpatients answered the questionnaire after reading the essay while bearing it read aloud. A forensic psychiatrist who was blind to the HCAT scores later examined the patients for competency. A subject's number of correct answers to the HCAT questionnaire was an accurate indicator of clinical competency as assessed by the psychiatrist. The results suggest that the HCAT is a useful tool for rapidly screening patients for competency to make treatment decisions.
Publication
Journal: Neurobehavioral toxicology and teratology
April/25/1984
Abstract
Clinical and laboratory methods were developed to detect motor abnormalities in patients with Huntington Disease. For clinical evaluation a quantitated neurological examination was used which factor analyzed into 2 scales: a chorea scale (a measure of involuntary movement) and a motor impairment scale (a measure of abnormalities of voluntary movement). Mechanized methods of measuring involuntary movement (accelerometer) and voluntary movement (reaction time, tapping speed, and movement time) were also developed. The motor abnormalities detected on the clinical and mechanical tests were not specific to HD but were also present in persons at 50% risk for HD and in patients with a variety of neurological disorders. The mechanized tests may be useful for screening for motor disorders in the population: they are non-specific, portable and do not require the services of an experienced clinician.
Publication
Journal: American Journal of Psychiatry
November/27/1986
Abstract
A research psychiatrist using a standardized interview found that 94% of a random sample of residents at a large, intermediate-care nursing home had mental disorders according to DSM-III criteria. Primary degenerative dementia and multi-infarct dementia were the most common diagnoses. In addition, the majority of demented patients also had noncognitive symptoms such as delusions and hallucinations, and these residents were significantly more likely to have an associated behavioral disorder than were residents without delusions or hallucinations. Replications of these results would point out the need for major revisions in the funding and delivery of psychiatric care for nursing home residents.
Publication
Journal: Archives of neurology
September/11/1995
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To detect cases of Alzheimer's disease (AD) in a large population of twins living throughout the United States and to examine concordance for AD in twins as a function of age and genotype for apolipoprotein E (APOE).
METHODS
Nationwide survey.
METHODS
Multistage screening and field evaluation beginning with two telephone interviews and culminating with laboratory tests, longitudinal neuropsychological measures, physician examination, and diagnostic consensus among experts.
METHODS
Membership in 1990-1991 of intact pairs in the National Academy of Sciences--National Research Council Registry of veteran twins, then aged 62 to 73 years.
METHODS
Completeness of case detection was examined in collateral studies. Zygosity and APOE genotypes were determined by restriction mapping. Concordance was calculated by the proband method.
RESULTS
Ninety subjects who screened positively for AD were studied in person, and 60 whose differential diagnoses included AD were followed up, as were their co-twins. Sensitivity of screening was estimated at greater than 99%, but 24% of subjects refused participation after initial screening. Seven of 38 diagnoses of AD have been confirmed at autopsy, and 31 other subjects eventually met criteria for probable or possible AD (prevalence estimate, 0.42%, 95% confidence interval, 0.29% to 0.56%), with good interrater reliability (intraclass r = .86). Excluding one discordant pair with unknown zygosity, concordance rates were 21.1% (4/19) for monozygotic and 11.1% (2/18) for dizygotic probands. Concordance was 50% for twins sharing the epsilon 4/epsilon 4 genotype at APOE, but there were no affected co-twins of 15 probands with onset before age 70 years, no epsilon 4 allele, and no family history of AD. The mean (SD) period of discordance in the latter pairs was 11.3 (3.3) years.
CONCLUSIONS
The multistage case-detection approach achieved reliable and valid diagnoses of AD with high apparent sensitivity but substantial attrition after initial screening. Genetic influences in AD at this age are limited, except among homozygotes for allele epsilon 4 at APOE. Subjects with early-onset AD who lack the epsilon 4 allele are not rare, and their condition appears to have little genetic influence. They should be ideal for studies on environmental cause of AD.
Publication
Journal: Brain Injury
August/10/1995
Abstract
Several case-control studies have reported head injury to be more common among patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) than healthy elderly controls. The present study sought to determine whether milder head injury is also a risk factor for AD. Furthermore, it was hypothesized that head injury would be more common among AD patients without a genetic risk for the disease. History of head injury in 68 consecutive cases of probable or definite AD and 34 non-demented control subjects was ascertained from their spouses. Head injury was reported in 20 of the AD patients (29%), and in only one control subject (2.9%) (odds ratio = 13.75). Twenty per cent of the familial and 43.5% of the sporadic AD cases reportedly had a premorbid head injury (odds ratio = 3.08). Head injury had no effect on age of dementia onset. The results indicate that head trauma may be a predisposing factor to AD, particularly in the absence of a clear genetic contribution.
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