A novel tool to detect behavioural symptoms in ALS
A novel tool to detect behavioural symptoms in ALS
There is need for a valid, sensitive and short instrument capable of detecting and quantifying behavioural changes in ALS, which can be utilized in clinical and research settings. This study aimed to 1) develop and validate such an instrument; 2) verify the most common behavioural symptoms; and 3) investigate longitudinal changes over a six-month period.
Two hundred and nineteen patients were included. The development sample (n = 140) was used to determine the most appropriate items to include in the new tool, the Motor Neuron Disease Behavioural Instrument (MiND-B), via a data-driven approach. An independent sample (n = 79) validated the tool. A more comprehensive sample (n = 50, sub-classified into ALS and ALS plus) was utilized to verify if the MiND-B could detect ALS plus patients. Finally, 20 ALS patients completed the MiND-B after a six-month period.
Apathy, disinhibition and stereotypical behaviour were all found to be very common symptoms in ALS occurring in 75%, 66% and 58%, respectively, of cases. Notably, the MiND-B could identify ALS plus patients without standard cognitive assessments. In conclusion, the MiND-B tool can detect patients with ALS plus reliably, by means of questions to the informant. This test could enable ALS centres to evaluate non-motor symptoms and adapt management and decision-making approaches as necessary.
298-304
Mioshi, Eneida
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Hsieh, Sharpley
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Caga, Jashelle
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Ramsey, Eleanor
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Chen, Kelly
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Lillo, Patricia
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Simon, Neil
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Vucic, Steve
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Hornberger, Michael
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Hodges, John R.
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Kiernan, Matthew C.
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2014
Mioshi, Eneida
7e860c34-19cd-468a-9fee-5fe8c5d071fe
Hsieh, Sharpley
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Caga, Jashelle
60538ad4-7b78-4060-a2a8-ecf65c30c428
Ramsey, Eleanor
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Chen, Kelly
57807470-6339-4087-8e1b-f1fa257390b7
Lillo, Patricia
359a4abf-438b-46d1-8716-c9583ed414db
Simon, Neil
dc33ac06-7da3-46b3-b005-f4670c865104
Vucic, Steve
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Hornberger, Michael
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Hodges, John R.
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Kiernan, Matthew C.
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Mioshi, Eneida, Hsieh, Sharpley, Caga, Jashelle, Ramsey, Eleanor, Chen, Kelly, Lillo, Patricia, Simon, Neil, Vucic, Steve, Hornberger, Michael, Hodges, John R. and Kiernan, Matthew C.
(2014)
A novel tool to detect behavioural symptoms in ALS.
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis and Frontotemporal Degeneration, 15 (3-4), .
(doi:10.3109/21678421.2014.896927).
Abstract
There is need for a valid, sensitive and short instrument capable of detecting and quantifying behavioural changes in ALS, which can be utilized in clinical and research settings. This study aimed to 1) develop and validate such an instrument; 2) verify the most common behavioural symptoms; and 3) investigate longitudinal changes over a six-month period.
Two hundred and nineteen patients were included. The development sample (n = 140) was used to determine the most appropriate items to include in the new tool, the Motor Neuron Disease Behavioural Instrument (MiND-B), via a data-driven approach. An independent sample (n = 79) validated the tool. A more comprehensive sample (n = 50, sub-classified into ALS and ALS plus) was utilized to verify if the MiND-B could detect ALS plus patients. Finally, 20 ALS patients completed the MiND-B after a six-month period.
Apathy, disinhibition and stereotypical behaviour were all found to be very common symptoms in ALS occurring in 75%, 66% and 58%, respectively, of cases. Notably, the MiND-B could identify ALS plus patients without standard cognitive assessments. In conclusion, the MiND-B tool can detect patients with ALS plus reliably, by means of questions to the informant. This test could enable ALS centres to evaluate non-motor symptoms and adapt management and decision-making approaches as necessary.
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Published date: 2014
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Local EPrints ID: 505003
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505003
ISSN: 2167-8421
PURE UUID: b7a3419b-1f8a-4b73-9bc3-cd198372e7b8
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Date deposited: 23 Sep 2025 17:09
Last modified: 24 Sep 2025 02:18
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Author:
Eneida Mioshi
Author:
Sharpley Hsieh
Author:
Jashelle Caga
Author:
Eleanor Ramsey
Author:
Kelly Chen
Author:
Patricia Lillo
Author:
Neil Simon
Author:
Steve Vucic
Author:
Michael Hornberger
Author:
John R. Hodges
Author:
Matthew C. Kiernan
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