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March 11, 2003; 60 (5) Articles

A visuospatial variant of mild cognitive impairment

Getting lost between aging and AD

Mark Mapstone, Teresa M. Steffenella, Charles J. Duffy
First published March 11, 2003, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1212/01.WNL.0000049471.76799.DE
Mark Mapstone
PhD
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Teresa M. Steffenella
MA
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Charles J. Duffy
MD PhD
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A visuospatial variant of mild cognitive impairment
Getting lost between aging and AD
Mark Mapstone, Teresa M. Steffenella, Charles J. Duffy
Neurology Mar 2003, 60 (5) 802-808; DOI: 10.1212/01.WNL.0000049471.76799.DE

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Abstract

Background: AD causes visuospatial disorientation that is associated with posterior cortical atrophy and impaired visual motion processing.

Objective: The authors characterized memory capacity and visual motion processing in young normal (YN) and older normal (ON) adult subjects and in patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and AD to see if deficits in these realms occur as isolated impairments.

Methods: Each participant underwent neuropsychological testing and gave push-button responses to indicate perception of panoramic visual motion stimuli.

Results: One fifth of the ON subjects, one third of the patients with MCI, and half of the patients with AD showed increasingly pervasive impairments of visual motion perception. These impairments were associated with poorer performance on the Money Road Map test of spatial navigation but not with verbal or visual memory deficits.

Conclusion: Impaired visual motion processing may accompany memory deficits in MCI or AD, or may occur alone in otherwise intact ON subjects. This suggests that visuospatial impairment may develop as an independent sign of neurodegenerative disease, possibly preceding the clinical onset of AD.

  • Received August 14, 2002.
  • Accepted November 10, 2002.
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