4.5 Article

Vestibular Loss Predicts Poorer Spatial Cognition in Patients with Alzheimer's Disease

期刊

JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMERS DISEASE
卷 61, 期 3, 页码 995-1003

出版社

IOS PRESS
DOI: 10.3233/JAD-170751

关键词

Alzheimer's disease; Money Road Map Test; spatial cognition; vestibular system

资金

  1. NIA/NIH K23 Award [1K23AG043504-01]
  2. Roberts Gift Fund
  3. Ossoff Family Fund
  4. NIH T32 Award [5T32DC000027-25]
  5. AAO-HNSF Core Grant [349386]
  6. NIH K23 Award [5K23DC013056-02]
  7. NIA award [3P50AG005146-32S1]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The vestibular system is an important contributor to balance control, spatial orientation, and falls risk. Recent evidence has shown that Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients have a higher prevalence of vestibular impairment relative to healthy controls. We sought to evaluate whether vestibular loss is specifically associated with poor spatial cognitive skills among patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and AD. We enrolled 50 patients (22 MCI and 28 AD) from an interdisciplinary Memory Clinic and measured vestibular physiologic function in all patients. Spatial cognitive function was assessed using the Money Road Map Test (MRMT) and the Trail Making Test Part B (TMT-B). General cognitive function was assessed with the Mini-Mental Status Examination (MMSE). In multivariable linear regression analyses adjusted for age, gender, education level, and MMSE, MCI and AD patients with vestibular loss made significantly more errors on the MRMT relative to patients with normal vestibular function (beta = 7.3, 95% CI 2.4, 12.1 for unilateral vestibular loss and beta = 6.4, 95% CI 1.9, 10.9 for bilateral vestibular loss). We further stratified AD patients into spatially normal and spatially impaired groups based on MRMT performance, and found that the prevalence of vestibular loss was significantly higher in the spatially impaired AD group relative to the spatially normal AD group. These findings support the hypothesis that vestibular loss contributes specifically to a decline in spatial cognitive ability in MCI and AD patients, independently of general cognitive decline, and may predict a spatially impaired subtype of AD.

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