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P3‐164: Profile of neuropsychological test results of mild cognitive impairment associated with presence of depression
Author(s) -
Oh Ja-Young,
Chung Chan-Seung,
Lee Jae-Hong,
Na Duk-Lyul,
Kim Doh Kwan,
Kim SangYun,
Seo Sang Won,
Kim Sang Joon,
Lee Joongsun,
Song Seung Hyun,
Choi Hyesook,
Choi Hye-ra,
Kim Seong-Yoon
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
alzheimer's and dementia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.713
H-Index - 118
eISSN - 1552-5279
pISSN - 1552-5260
DOI - 10.1016/j.jalz.2008.05.1730
Subject(s) - depression (economics) , neuropsychology , dementia , psychology , neuropsychological test , psychiatry , cognitive impairment , cognition , geriatric depression scale , clinical psychology , medicine , audiology , disease , depressive symptoms , economics , macroeconomics
(p 0.002), Following Commands (p 0.008), Word Learning Cued Recall (p 0.003), Recognition of Learned Words (p 0.001), Repetition (p 0.03), Object Description (p 0.002), Reading Comprehension Sentence (p 0.04), Generative Naming (p 0.005), Confrontation Naming (p 0.04), Concept Definition (p 0.008), Generative Drawing (p 0.0001) and Story Retelling Delayed (p 0.0001). Depressed patients differed form AD patients in Mental State (p 0.003), Recognition of Learned Words (p 0.02), Generative Drawing (p 0.005) and Story Retelling Delayed (p 0.004). Conclusions: Mild AD patients showed worse performance than normal subjects in 12 out of 17 tasks, while depressed patients had scores that were intermediary to that of controls and AD in most tasks, statistically differing from AD patients in only 4 tasks.