PsychogériatrieConscience des déficits et anosognosie dans la maladie d’AlzheimerAwareness of deficits and anosognosia in Alzheimer's disease
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Cited by (62)
The pathway from cognitive impairment to caries in older adults: A conceptual model
2018, Journal of the American Dental AssociationCitation Excerpt :Dental professionals usually assess how well PWCI function through verbal communication with patients, advising patients to repeat, demonstrate, or repeat and demonstrate instructions, or via asking the caregivers.44 All of these sources of information are limited by the knowledge and objectivity of the respondent and may lead to variable assessment.45-49 Among the small proportion of oral health care professionals (6%) who routinely evaluate the DRF of PWCI using a standardized cognitive- or functional-assessment instrument, the Katz Index of Independence in Activities of Daily Living (Katz ADL),50 the Lawton Instrumental Activities of Daily Living Scale (Lawton IADL),51 or the Mini Mental State Examination52 are commonly used.44
Self-awareness and aging
2017, NPG Neurologie - Psychiatrie - GeriatrieSelf-awareness and the medial temporal lobe in neurodegenerative diseases
2017, Neuroscience and Biobehavioral ReviewsCitation Excerpt :Indeed, during the acute phase of transient global amnesia, patients are aware of their disease state but are unable to point to the amnesic nature of their disorder (Hainselin et al., 2012). “Dissociated” type of awareness, with awareness of some type of deficits and unawareness of others, is actually a frequent phenomenon (see Antoine et al., 2004 for review). These various observations suggest either that awareness of memory deficits after selective hippocampal lesion may occur only when there is time for compensation by semantic learning, like in patients HM or KC, or that patients with hippocampal lesion can be aware of memory deficits but they do not accurately perceive the degree of their deficit.
Mood-congruent recollection and anosognosia in Alzheimer's disease
2016, CortexCitation Excerpt :Anosognosia refers to a lack of awareness about deficit or condition as found in various neurological conditions, such as aphasia, hemiplegia and also dementia (Mograbi, Brown, & Morris, 2009; Ries et al., 2007; Stuss, 1991; Stuss, Rosenbaum, Malcolm, Christiana, & Keenan, 2005). Unawareness regarding the disease or cognitive impairments is a common characteristic of Alzheimer's disease (AD) (Agnew & Morris, 1998; Morris & Hannesdottir, 2004), with estimates obtained with large samples reaching almost 80% (Antoine, Antoine, Guermonprez, & Frigard, 2004; Mograbi, Ferri, et al., 2012; Sousa et al., 2015). Lack of awareness has several important clinical implications (Bertrand, Landeira-Fernandez, & Mograbi, 2013; Spalletta, Girardi, Caltagirone, & Orfei, 2012), which go from diminished treatment adherence (Arlt, Lindner, Rösler, & Von Renteln-Kruse, 2008), increased engagement in high-risk situations (Seltzer, Vasterling, Yoder, & Thompson, 1997; Starkstein, Jorge, Mizrahi, Adrian, & Robinson, 2007), earlier institutionalization (Horning, Melrose, & Sultzer, 2014; Steele, Rovner, Chase, & Folstein, 1990) to increased caregiver burden (Clare et al., 2011; DeBettignies, Mahurin, & Pirozzolo, 1990; Rymer et al., 2002; Seltzer et al., 1997; Turró-Garriga et al., 2013).