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The Alzheimer's disease activities of daily living international scale (ADL-IS)
Reisberg B; Finkel S; Overall J; Schmidt-Gollas N; Kanowski S; Lehfeld H; Hulla F; Sclan SG; Wilms HU; Heininger K; Hindmarch I; Stemmler M; Poon L; Kluger A; Cooler C; Bergener M; Hugonot-Diener L; Robert PH; Antipolis S; Erzigkeit H
BACKGROUND: Activities of daily living (ADL) deficits are integral components of dementia disorders, and ADL measures are among the most robust markers of the course of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Despite this acknowledged importance, no clearly useful ADL instrument for cross-cultural application in pharmacologic trials in the early stages of AD had been available. METHOD: An international effort was launched to develop an ADL scale for pharmacologic trials in early AD. Steps taken from 1990 to the present included: (1) international scientific working group meetings and reviews, (2) reviews of existing measures, (3) collating of existent, nonredundant items, (4) querying experts for new items, (5) interviews with informants and subjects in the USA, France, and Germany, toward the identification of potential new items, (6) identification of an item pool based upon these procedures, (7) creation of a trial instrument, (8) piloting of this instrument, and (9) refinement of the scale based upon statistical analysis of the pilot data. Final item selection was based upon: (1) relevance for > or = 80% of subjects in severity-stratified USA and German samples; (2) absence of gender and national biases; (3) significant (p <.05) discrimination between (a) normal versus mildly impaired and (b) mildly impaired versus moderately to moderately severely impaired subjects; and (4) Global Deterioration Scale (GDS) scores accounting for > or = 12% of variance in the item after controlling for age and gender. RESULTS: An ADL scale consisting of 40 items that correlate with the global and cognitive progress of AD is developed for international usage in pharmacologic trials in incipient, mild, moderate, and moderately severe AD. The scale contains 40 items falling within 13 ADL categories. The 40-item scale is shown to have .81 correlation with GDS staging, .81 with mental status assessment (Mini-Mental State Examination), and .81 with a psychometric test (the SKT) (p values < .001). CONCLUSION: This scale can be used to measure therapeutic response in AD
PMID: 11495392
ISSN: 1041-6102
CID: 26631
Fibrillar amyloid-beta affects neurofibrillary changes but only in neurons already involved in neurofibrillary degeneration
Wegiel J; Bobinski M; Tarnawski M; Dziewiatkowski J; Popovitch E; Miller DC; Wisniewski T; Golomb J; de Leon MJ; Reisberg B
The aim of this study of the cerebral cortex of 8 non-demented elderly subjects and of 17 subjects in the severe stage of Alzheimer's disease (AD) (Global Deterioration Scale stage 7/Functional Assessment Staging procedure stage 7a-f) was to examine the relationships between amyloid-beta (Abeta) deposits and neurofibrillary degeneration. The study shows that neuronal processes with neurofibrillary changes are detectable in only a minority of fibrillar plaques: from 31% to 49% of fibrillar plaques within frontal, temporal, parietal, limbic, occipital, and insular cortices. The correlations observed between the numerical densities of neurons with neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) and the densities of Thioflavin-S-positive fibrillar plaques with neurofibrillary changes (r=0.61; P<0.01) indicate that neurofibrillary pathology in neocortical plaques reflects the topography and rate of neurofibrillary changes in neocortical neurons. The accumulation of abnormally phosphorylated tau in only some plaques indicates that fibrillar Abeta enhances paired helical filament accumulation locally only in dystrophic neurites already involved in neurofibrillary degeneration. The lack of correlation between the number of neurons with neurofibrillary changes and the number of all Thioflavin-S-positive fibrillar plaques (with and without neurofibrillary changes) suggests that beta-amyloidosis does not contribute to initiation of neurofibrillary degeneration in neurons
PMID: 11515787
ISSN: 0001-6322
CID: 34299
Shift from fibrillar to nonfibrillar Abeta deposits in the neocortex of subjects with Alzheimer disease
Wegiel J; Bobinski M; Tarnawski M; Dziewiatkowski J; Popovitch E; Bobinski M; Lach B; Reisberg B; Miller DC; De Santi S; De Leon MJ
A morphometric study of amyloid-beta-positive plaques in the neocortex of eight non-demented people from 68 to 82 years of age and 17 subjects with late-stage Alzheimer disease (GDS stage 7/FAST stages 7a-f) from 73 to 93 years of age shows a shift from prevalence of fibrillar plaques to prevalence of nonfibrillar plaques. In the aged, non-demented subjects, about 4/mm^2 plaques are detectable in the neocortex, and the majority are fibrillar plaques. Specifically, 64% found to be classical fibrillar and Thioflavin-S-positive bright primitive plaques. A lower percentage of pale primitive plaques (35%) relatively small proportion of plaques that are poor in thioflavin S-positive fibrils. The numerical density of plaques in the severe stage of AD increases to about 41/mm^2. Severely demented subjects appear to maintain an active process of fibrillar plaque formation. This is reflected in the presence of 3% bright primitive plaques. Severely demented subjects also manifest plaque degradation, reflected in the presence of 22% and 48% percentages of classical fibrillar plaques in non-demented subjects and in the end stage of disease suggest that once activated, the process of fibrillar plaque formation persists at a somewhat stable rate during the whole course of brain amyloidosis
PMID: 12214072
ISSN: 1387-2877
CID: 34297
Addition of a frequency-weighted score to the Behavioral Pathology in Alzheimer's Disease Rating Scale: the BEHAVE-AD-FW: methodology and reliability
Monteiro IM; Boksay I; Auer SR; Torossian C; Ferris SH; Reisberg B
The Behavioral Pathology in Alzheimer's Disease Rating Scale (BEHAVE-AD) is a well-established instrument, designed to assess potentially remediable behavioral symptoms in Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients as well as to evaluate treatment outcome. It consists of 25 symptoms grouped into seven categories. Each symptom is scored on the basis of severity on a four-point scale. A knowledgeable caregiver is queried and items are scored on the basis of symptoms noted in the preceding two weeks. Reliability, construct validity and criterion validity data for the BEHAVE-AD have previously been published. Because of the significance of psychopathology in dementia, it is necessary to optimally describe and define the nature, magnitude and prevalence of behavioral symptomatology. Accordingly, a frequency component was added to each of the 25 items of the BEHAVE-AD scale. The objective of the present report is to describe this new Behavioral Pathology in Alzheimer's Disease Frequency-Weighted Severity Scale (BEHAVE-AD-FW) and to establish its inter-rater reliability. In this investigation the BEHAVE-AD-FW scale was administered to caregivers of 28 patients with either mildly impaired cognitive function or a dementia diagnosis. Two clinicians separately and independently rated the responses. Analyses determined that the intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) for the frequency component varied between 0.86 and 0.97 for each of the seven BEHAVE-AD categories (p(s) < 0.001). ICCs for the frequency-weighted scores (item severity score x item frequency score) ranged from 0.69 to 0.98 for the seven symptom categories (p(s) < 0.001). For the BEHAVE-AD-FW total scores, the ICC was 0.91 (P < 0.001). These results indicate that the frequency-weighted component is a reliable addition to the BEHAVE-AD scale
PMID: 11520474
ISSN: 0924-9338
CID: 26696
Results of a placebo-controlled 6-month trial with memantine in moderate to severe Alzheimer's disease (AD)
Reisberg, B; Ferris, S; Sahin, K; Windscheif, U; Mobius, H J
BIOSIS:200000542460
ISSN: 0924-977x
CID: 15779
The 1999 IPA/Bayer Research Awards
Reisberg B
PMID: 10798450
ISSN: 1041-6102
CID: 11718
Postmortem findings in patients with Alzheimer's disease [Meeting Abstract]
Wu, H; Miller, D C; Reisberg, B; Waisman, J
BIOSIS:200000508118
ISSN: 0023-6837
CID: 15796
Equilibrium and limb coordination in mild cognitive impairment and mild Alzheimer's disease
Franssen EH; Souren LE; Torossian CL; Reisberg B
OBJECTIVE: To examine changes in equilibrium and limb coordination in normal aging, mild cognitive impairment, and moderate cognitive impairment associated with early probable Alzheimer's disease (AD), by means of parametric clinical measures. DESIGN: Case series SETTING: Out-patient clinic. PARTICIPANTS: A consecutive sample of 365 community-residing ambulatory volunteers (137 men, 228 women; mean age 70.4 +/- 9.4 years; mean educational attainment 14.6 +/- 3.1 years), who were followed in an ongoing longitudinal study of aging and AD, comprising cognitively intact individuals, persons with mild cognitive impairment, and patients with mild AD. MEASUREMENTS: For general magnitude of cognitive function, the Global Deterioration Scale (GDS). For cognition, the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE). Equilibrium was assessed with parametric measurements of single leg stance (SLS) and tandem walking (TW). Limb coordination was assessed with parametric measurements of foot tapping (FT), alternating pronation and supination (PS), and sequential finger to thumb tapping (FTH). MAIN RESULTS: After adjustment for age, persons with mild cognitive impairment or mild AD had significantly poorer performance on parametric clinical tests of equilibrium and limb coordination compared with cognitively intact individuals (P < .05). CONCLUSIONS: Changes in equilibrium and limb coordination are clinically demonstrable in persons with mild cognitive impairment and mild AD using simple parametric tests. Such tests could potentially identify individuals with increased risk of falling. Early diagnosis and treatment of conditions that can jeopardize equilibrium and limb coordination, as well as balance and coordination training, might help cognitively impaired older people to maintain optimal function and may decrease the risk of falls and injuries
PMID: 10203123
ISSN: 0002-8614
CID: 6082
Towards a science of Alzheimer's disease management: a model based upon current knowledge of retrogenesis
Reisberg B; Kenowsky S; Franssen EH; Auer SR; Souren LE
BACKGROUND: General relationships between dotage and infancy and childhood have been acknowledged for more than two millennia. Recent findings indicate precise relationships between functional, praxic, and feeding changes in the course of the degenerative dementia of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and inverse corresponding developmental sequences. Similar inverse relationships between AD and human development can be described for cognition and language skills; for physiologic measures of electroencephalographic activity, brain glucose metabolism, and developmental neurologic reflex changes; and for the neuropathologic and neuroanatomic progression of these processes. In AD, these processes may be termed 'retrogenesis.' The relevance of the retrogenesis model for AD management is explored. METHOD: The functional stages of AD can be translated into developmental age equivalents that can be utilized to explicate observed changes in the disease. RESULTS: The retrogenesis-based developmental age model can usefully inform an understanding of the general care needs, emotional and behavioral changes, and activity needs of the AD patient. This model must be amended by necessary caveats regarding physical differences, variations in age-associated pathology, differences in social and societal reactions, and differences in background between AD patients and their developmental age 'peers.' CONCLUSIONS: Knowledge of retrogenesis and the developmental age of the AD patient can form a nidus for the development of a nascent science of disease management. Such a science must ultimately incorporate not only appropriate caveats but also relevant universal human needs, such as those for dignity, love, and movement
PMID: 10189596
ISSN: 1041-6102
CID: 6077
Cerebellar atrophy in Alzheimer's disease-clinicopathological correlations
Wegiel J; Wisniewski HM; Dziewiatkowski J; Badmajew E; Tarnawski M; Reisberg B; Mlodzik B; De Leon MJ; Miller DC
Morphometry of the cerebellum of 11 subjects who died in the severe, final stage of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and of five age-matched subjects without dementia revealed significant atrophy in the AD group, with a decrease in the volume of the molecular layer by 24% and of the granular layer by 22% in comparison with controls. The 32% decrease in the total number of Purkinje cells that was observed correlates with the atrophy of the molecular layer, whereas the 30% reduction in the total number of granule cells correlates with the atrophy of the molecular and granular layers. A unique pattern of Alzheimer-type pathology was observed in the cerebellum: (1) there were no neurofibrillary changes in the cerebellum of either the control or the AD subjects, (2) there was almost the same extent of leptomeningeal and cortical amyloid angiopathy in the normal aged subjects and in the AD patients, and (3) the presence of plaques was noted in the AD group, but not in the control group. This pattern of pathology suggests that two factors might be considered in the etiopathogenesis of cerebellar atrophy: (1) transneuronal degeneration and neuronal loss resulting from primary pathologic changes in cerebral structures and (2) parenchymal cerebellar ss-amyloidosis. The correlation between the temporal duration of AD and both the decrease of the total number of granule cells (r=0.86, p<0.01) and the volumetric loss of the molecular (r=0.73, p<0.05) and granular (r=0.93, p<0.001) layers of the cerebellar cortex indicates that these cerebellar atrophic changes are likely to be related to the basic pathologic process of AD. Similarly, the correlation between the most complex parameter the atrophy of the cerebellar cortex and the Functional Assessment Staging (FAST) measure of the clinical severity of AD at the time of demise (r=0.63, p<0.05) as well as with the duration of AD (r=0.78, p<0.01) indicates that cerebellar pathology, when viewed holistically, evolves continuously in association with clinical changes throughout the clinically manifest course of AD.
PMID: 9914436
ISSN: 0006-8993
CID: 7465