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Memory
Tests Can Predict Dementia
Jan. 24, 2003 - If you can remember
the words “pipe” and “cigar” better than “nail” and “butter,” you are
not going to have dementia soon, according to a study in the
Netherlands.
It is now possible to develop memory
tests that can predict dementia, according to doctoral research by the
neuropsychologist Pauline Spaan from the University of Amsterdam.
One of the things revealed in Spaan's
research was that elderly persons who developed dementia two years
later, were scarcely better at remembering word pairs clearly linked
in meaning (for example, pipe - cigar) than word pairs without such a
link (for example, nail - butter). Elderly persons who did not have
dementia two years later, however, benefited from such a link in
meaning when remembering word pairs. Spaan concluded that the memory
problems of elderly people in an early stage of dementia could be
attributed to a disrupted semantic processing.
In addition it transpired that a test
for the unconscious (implicit) recall of previously presented words
significantly improved the prediction of dementia: elderly persons in
the early stage of dementia did not benefit from the repeated
presentation of words.
With these data it is possible to
distinguish 'normal' age-related memory problems that generally occur
in the elderly from memory problems typical of the early stages of
dementia, according to Spaan. This is particularly important, as the
present generation of drugs aimed at inhibiting the course of dementia
are only useful if administered in the earliest stages of the disease.
A large group of elderly people who
lived semi-independently, were subjected by Spaan to a wide range of
memory tests developed at the University of Amsterdam. These elderly
persons participated in the population study Longitudinal Aging Study
Amsterdam from the Free University of Amsterdam. The tests were
conducted on two occasions with an interval of two years.
Using the official diagnostic
criteria, nobody in the group was found to have dementia during the
first assessment. During the repeat assessment two years later, it was
established who had developed dementia during the intervening period.
Using data from the first assessment, Spaan compared the memory test
performance of the elderly persons who later developed dementia with
those who did not.
Spaan argues that the current methods
used to detect dementia concentrate too much on the so-called episodic
memory. That is the conscious memory of personal and specific
information related to time and place. The researcher recommends the
use of memory tests that in addition to the episodic memory also
assume a semantic memory (concerning general knowledge and
information, including our vocabulary) and an implicit memory (which
includes various unconscious learning processes). In this manner the
current test material could be improved in order to recognise dementia
at an earlier stage.
Spaan's research was part of the
Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research program 'Memory
processes and dementia'. -
http://www.nwo.nl/ |