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Activities of daily living in frontotemporal dementia and Alzheimer disease

Activities of daily living in frontotemporal dementia and Alzheimer disease
Activities of daily living in frontotemporal dementia and Alzheimer disease
Objective: to evaluate activities of daily living (ADLs) in three clinical variants of frontotemporal dementia and the relationship to cognitive dysfunction.

Methods: fifty-nine patients and caregivers participated in this cross-sectional study: behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bv-FTD, n = 15), progressive nonfluent aphasia (PNFA, n = 10), semantic dementia (n = 15), and Alzheimer disease (AD, n = 19). Caregivers were interviewed with the Disability Assessment for Dementia (DAD) to provide two outcome measures about ADLs: basic and instrumental ADLs (BADLs, IADL). In addition, patients were rated on the Clinical Dementia Rating Scale (CDR), and performance on cognitive measures (Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination Revised [ACE-R]) was assessed.

Results: on the DAD, the bv-FTD group was most affected (56% of normal), whereas PNFA and semantic dementia patients were least impaired (83% and 85%); AD was intermediate (76%). The opposite pattern was seen on the ACE-R, where PNFA and semantic dementia groups were most affected, and bv-FTD showed least impairment; AD was again intermediate. Scores on the DAD did not correlate with cognitive measures, CDR, or disease duration. We further analyzed which aspect of ADLs was most affected, and a unique pattern of deficits emerged for the bv-FTD group (initiation affected > planning > execution for BADLs).

Conclusion: frontotemporal dementia has a devastating effect on activities of daily living, which is of considerable importance to caregivers and not captured by bedside cognitive tests.
0028-3878
2077-2084
Mioshi, E.
5310242a-e90b-476d-a02d-51f13f973c8e
Kipps, C.M.
e43be016-2dc2-45e6-9a02-ab2a0e0208d5
Dawson, K.
6fd11634-cb7d-4c04-8a5b-cb17b0c5ab4b
Mitchell, J.
1ba1021f-d0e0-4465-b09a-d5eb976b7173
Graham, A.
e1e4a3b3-7bcf-41d6-8f96-cbf311a32228
Hodges, J.R.
c17af0a9-82e7-4f5a-8a97-d50ec06bbb0a
Mioshi, E.
5310242a-e90b-476d-a02d-51f13f973c8e
Kipps, C.M.
e43be016-2dc2-45e6-9a02-ab2a0e0208d5
Dawson, K.
6fd11634-cb7d-4c04-8a5b-cb17b0c5ab4b
Mitchell, J.
1ba1021f-d0e0-4465-b09a-d5eb976b7173
Graham, A.
e1e4a3b3-7bcf-41d6-8f96-cbf311a32228
Hodges, J.R.
c17af0a9-82e7-4f5a-8a97-d50ec06bbb0a

Mioshi, E., Kipps, C.M., Dawson, K., Mitchell, J., Graham, A. and Hodges, J.R. (2007) Activities of daily living in frontotemporal dementia and Alzheimer disease. Neurology, 68 (24), 2077-2084. (doi:10.1212/01.wnl.0000264897.13722.53).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: to evaluate activities of daily living (ADLs) in three clinical variants of frontotemporal dementia and the relationship to cognitive dysfunction.

Methods: fifty-nine patients and caregivers participated in this cross-sectional study: behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bv-FTD, n = 15), progressive nonfluent aphasia (PNFA, n = 10), semantic dementia (n = 15), and Alzheimer disease (AD, n = 19). Caregivers were interviewed with the Disability Assessment for Dementia (DAD) to provide two outcome measures about ADLs: basic and instrumental ADLs (BADLs, IADL). In addition, patients were rated on the Clinical Dementia Rating Scale (CDR), and performance on cognitive measures (Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination Revised [ACE-R]) was assessed.

Results: on the DAD, the bv-FTD group was most affected (56% of normal), whereas PNFA and semantic dementia patients were least impaired (83% and 85%); AD was intermediate (76%). The opposite pattern was seen on the ACE-R, where PNFA and semantic dementia groups were most affected, and bv-FTD showed least impairment; AD was again intermediate. Scores on the DAD did not correlate with cognitive measures, CDR, or disease duration. We further analyzed which aspect of ADLs was most affected, and a unique pattern of deficits emerged for the bv-FTD group (initiation affected > planning > execution for BADLs).

Conclusion: frontotemporal dementia has a devastating effect on activities of daily living, which is of considerable importance to caregivers and not captured by bedside cognitive tests.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 11 June 2007
Published date: 12 June 2007

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 489364
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/489364
ISSN: 0028-3878
PURE UUID: 97a3238d-9b2a-42d8-a227-78d9190d46f2
ORCID for C.M. Kipps: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5205-9712

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Date deposited: 23 Apr 2024 16:31
Last modified: 24 Apr 2024 01:56

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Contributors

Author: E. Mioshi
Author: C.M. Kipps ORCID iD
Author: K. Dawson
Author: J. Mitchell
Author: A. Graham
Author: J.R. Hodges

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