Supplementary Material for: Imaging Care Requirements: Use of Functional Neuroimaging to Predict Dementia Caregiver Burden
Supplementary Material for: Imaging Care Requirements: Use of Functional Neuroimaging to Predict Dementia Caregiver Burden
Background: Dementia caregivers frequently report high stress, with increased burden associated with worse outcomes for both patients and caregivers. Although many studies relate clinical phenotypes to burden, the relationship between imaging pathology and burden, irrespective of diagnosis, is unknown. This study investigated the relationship between caregiver burden and patient regional cerebral blood flow in dementia.
Methods: Seventy-sev en patients with cognitive impairment undergoing brain perfusion single-photon emission computed tomography imaging in normal clinical care and their caregivers were recruited. Caregiver burden was ranked from “little” to “severe” using the Zarit Burden Interview and perfusion values extracted from the patient images for predefined regions of interest. The associations between burden score and regional function on imaging were tested.
Results: Burden score was significantly higher for caregivers of patients with abnormal perfusion compared to those with normal perfusion in the left and right frontal, right parietal, and right temporal lobes. No difference in burden was found in the left parietal or temporal groups. Correlations showed that a higher caregiver burden was associated with lower patient perfusion scores in the same regions.
Conclusion: Caregiver burden is strongly related to the extent of frontal or right-predominant parietal or temporal lobe dysfunction. Regional abnormality on perfusion imaging can be used to facilitate identification of individuals who are likely to create a high burden on caregivers.
Medicine
A.M.J., Prosser
144c53bb-df73-48ee-a087-f4fc9a35b298
Spreadbury, John
164cd819-25dc-49c0-8630-1518a80fc3e6
L., Tossici-Bolt
70fa2d0d-ba9a-4ef5-bcb7-38afd5ee1fc8
Kipps, Christopher
e43be016-2dc2-45e6-9a02-ab2a0e0208d5
A.M.J., Prosser
144c53bb-df73-48ee-a087-f4fc9a35b298
Spreadbury, John
164cd819-25dc-49c0-8630-1518a80fc3e6
L., Tossici-Bolt
70fa2d0d-ba9a-4ef5-bcb7-38afd5ee1fc8
Kipps, Christopher
e43be016-2dc2-45e6-9a02-ab2a0e0208d5
A.M.J., Prosser, Spreadbury, John, L., Tossici-Bolt and Kipps, Christopher
(2018)
Supplementary Material for: Imaging Care Requirements: Use of Functional Neuroimaging to Predict Dementia Caregiver Burden.
Figshare
doi:10.6084/m9.figshare.6176123.v1
[Dataset]
Abstract
Background: Dementia caregivers frequently report high stress, with increased burden associated with worse outcomes for both patients and caregivers. Although many studies relate clinical phenotypes to burden, the relationship between imaging pathology and burden, irrespective of diagnosis, is unknown. This study investigated the relationship between caregiver burden and patient regional cerebral blood flow in dementia.
Methods: Seventy-sev en patients with cognitive impairment undergoing brain perfusion single-photon emission computed tomography imaging in normal clinical care and their caregivers were recruited. Caregiver burden was ranked from “little” to “severe” using the Zarit Burden Interview and perfusion values extracted from the patient images for predefined regions of interest. The associations between burden score and regional function on imaging were tested.
Results: Burden score was significantly higher for caregivers of patients with abnormal perfusion compared to those with normal perfusion in the left and right frontal, right parietal, and right temporal lobes. No difference in burden was found in the left parietal or temporal groups. Correlations showed that a higher caregiver burden was associated with lower patient perfusion scores in the same regions.
Conclusion: Caregiver burden is strongly related to the extent of frontal or right-predominant parietal or temporal lobe dysfunction. Regional abnormality on perfusion imaging can be used to facilitate identification of individuals who are likely to create a high burden on caregivers.
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Published date: 2018
Keywords:
Medicine
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Local EPrints ID: 436512
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/436512
PURE UUID: 3e61edb8-5934-4900-89e6-a0f3b54924a1
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Date deposited: 11 Dec 2019 17:31
Last modified: 22 Apr 2024 01:52
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Creator:
Prosser A.M.J.
Creator:
John Spreadbury
Creator:
Tossici-Bolt L.
Creator:
Christopher Kipps
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