Recognition memory span in mildly and moderately demented patients with alzheimer's disease
Authors:
David P. Salmon a;
Eric Granholm a;
Donna McCullough a;
Nelson Butters a;
Igor Grant b
| Affiliations: | a Departments of Psychology and Psychiatry, San Diego |
| b Veterans Administration Medical Center and Departments of Neurosciences and Psychiatry, University of California School of Medicine, San Diego |
DOI:
10.1080/01688638908400904
Publication Frequency:
8 issues per year
Published in:
Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology,
Volume
11,
Issue
4
August
1989
, pages 429
- 443
Subjects:
Clinical Neuropsychology;
Neuropsychology;
Formats available:
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(English)
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Abstract
An abbreviated form of Moss et al.'s (1986) Recognition Span Test (RST) was administered to patients with mild or moderate dementia of the Alzheimer type (DAT) and to intact control (NC) subjects. Memory spans for verbal (i.e., words), spatial and configurational (i.e., faces) information were assessed. Delayed recall (15 s and 2 min) of the words used on the verbal recognition span was also determined. The results showed that both DAT patient groups were impaired on the three recognition tasks and that the spatial and verbal forms differentiated the mildly from the moderately demented patients. The mean overall recognition span scores (spatial+verbal+facial) differentiated between DAT patients and intact controls, with 37 of the 39 patients falling beyond the 95% confidence limits derived from the control subjects' scores. On verbal recall, both the mildly and moderately demented patients were severely impaired and evidenced a very rapid rate of forgetting between the 15-s and 2-min recall attempts. These findings suggest that the RST is not only highly sensitive to memory disorders in the early stages of DAT but also effective in discriminating among various stages of this disorder.
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