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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The cognitive ability of an incident cohort of Parkinson's patients in the UK. The CamPaIGN study

Thomas Foltynie, +3 more
- 01 Mar 2004 - 
- Vol. 127, Iss: 3, pp 550-560
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TLDR
The pattern of cognitive deficits seen among patients using the Mini-Mental State Examination, a pattern recognition task, and the Tower of London task suggests that sub-groups of patients based on cognitive ability might be identifiable even in the early stages of disease, which may reflect regional differences in the underlying neuropathological processes.
Abstract
We have used multiple sources to identify a population-representative cohort of newly diagnosed patients with parkinsonism and Parkinson's disease in the UK over a 2-year period. All patients have been invited to participate in a detailed clinical assessment either at home or in an outpatient clinic. These assessments have been used to refine clinical diagnoses of parkinsonism using established criteria, and describe some of the phenotypic variability of Parkinson's disease at the time of diagnosis. The crude incidence of Parkinson's disease was 13.6/10(5yr-1) [confidence interval (CI) 11.8-15.6 and of parkinsonism was 20.9/10(5yr-1) (CI 18.7-23.3). Age-standardized to the 1991 European population, the incidence figures become 10.8/10(5yr-1) (CI 9.4-12.4) for Parkinson's disease and 16.6/10(5yr-1) (CI 14.8-18.6) for parkinsonism. Thirty-six per cent of the Parkinson's disease patients had evidence of cognitive impairment based on their performance in the Mini-Mental State Examination, a pattern recognition task, and the Tower of London task. The pattern of cognitive deficits seen among these patients using these and further cognitive tasks suggests that sub-groups of patients based on cognitive ability might be identifiable even in the early stages of disease, which may reflect regional differences in the underlying neuropathological processes.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Sydney Multicenter Study of Parkinson's Disease : The Inevitability of Dementia at 20 years

TL;DR: After 20 years follow-up of newly diagnosed patients with Parkinson's disease (PD), 100 of 136 (74%) have died and 17 people with dementia had postmortems, while others had mixed neuropathology.
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A systematic review of prevalence studies of dementia in Parkinson's disease.

TL;DR: A systematic review of previous studies of the prevalence of PDD using PubMed to search the literature suggests that 24 to 31% of PD patients have dementia, and that 3 to 4% of the dementia in the population would be due to PDD.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cognitive profile of patients with newly diagnosed Parkinson disease

TL;DR: In this paper, the frequency and pattern of cognitive dysfunction in patients with newly diagnosed Parkinson disease (PD) and to identify its demographic and clinical correlates were identified with multiple logistic regression analysis.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

“Mini-mental state”: A practical method for grading the cognitive state of patients for the clinician

TL;DR: A simplified, scored form of the cognitive mental status examination, the “Mini-Mental State” (MMS) which includes eleven questions, requires only 5-10 min to administer, and is therefore practical to use serially and routinely.

A practical method for grading the cognitive state of patients for the clinician

TL;DR: The Mini-Mental State (MMS) as mentioned in this paper is a simplified version of the standard WAIS with eleven questions and requires only 5-10 min to administer, and is therefore practical to use serially and routinely.
Journal ArticleDOI

Accuracy of clinical diagnosis of idiopathic Parkinson's disease: a clinico-pathological study of 100 cases.

TL;DR: The pathological findings in 100 patients diagnosed prospectively by a group of consultant neurologists as having idiopathic Parkinson's disease are reported, and these observations call into question current concepts of Parkinson's Disease as a single distinct morbid entity.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: This work identified progressive disabling mental impairment progressing to dementia as the central feature of DLB, and identified optimal staining methods for each of these and devised a protocol for the evaluation of cortical LB frequency based on a brain sampling procedure consistent with CERAD.
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