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Browsing by Subject "Neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPS)"
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Item Diagnostic criteria for apathy in neurocognitive disorders(Wiley, 2021) Miller, David S.; Robert, Philippe; Ereshefsky, Larry; Adler, Lawrence; Bateman, Daniel; Cummings, Jeff; DeKosky, Steven T.; Fischer, Corinne E.; Husain, Masud; Ismail, Zahinoor; Jaeger, Judith; Lerner, Alan J.; Li, Abby; Lyketsos, Constantine G.; Manera, Valeria; Mintzer, Jacobo; Moebius, Hans J.; Mortby, Moyra; Meulien, Didier; Pollentier, Stephane; Porsteinsson, Anton; Rasmussen, Jill; Rosenberg, Paul B.; Ruthirakuhan, Myuri T.; Sano, Mary; Zucchero Sarracini, Carla; Lanctôt, Krista L.; Psychiatry, School of MedicineIntroduction: Apathy is common in neurocognitive disorders (NCD) but NCD-specific diagnostic criteria are needed. Methods: The International Society for CNS Clinical Trials Methodology Apathy Work Group convened an expert group and sought input from academia, health-care, industry, and regulatory bodies. A modified Delphi methodology was followed, and included an extensive literature review, two surveys, and two meetings at international conferences, culminating in a consensus meeting in 2019. Results: The final criteria reached consensus with more than 80% agreement on all parts and included: limited to people with NCD; symptoms persistent or frequently recurrent over at least 4 weeks, a change from the patient's usual behavior, and including one of the following: diminished initiative, diminished interest, or diminished emotional expression/responsiveness; causing significant functional impairment and not exclusively explained by other etiologies. Discussion: These criteria provide a framework for defining apathy as a unique clinical construct in NCD for diagnosis and further research.Item Sources of Burden in Caregivers of Persons with Early- and Late-Onset Alzheimer’s Disease(Oxford University Press, 2023) Crouch, Adele; Massimo, Lauren; School of NursingFunctional impairment and neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPS) are common in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and contribute to caregiver burden. Persons with early-onset AD (EOAD) on average experience greater functional impairment and NPS compared to late-onset AD (LOAD), yet their contribution to caregiver burden have not been explored. Objectives were to: 1) compare functional impairment, NPS, and caregiving burden in EOAD and LOAD; 2) identify sources of caregiver burden including functional impairment and NPS in EOAD and LOAD. Caregivers of 85 persons with EOAD (n=63) and LOAD (n=22) completed questionnaires [Functional Activities Questionnaire, Neuropsychiatric Inventory, Zarit Burden Inventory]. T-tests compared group differences in function, NPS, and caregiver burden. Persons with EOAD had greater NPS frequency than LOAD (t= 2.275, p=0.026). There were no significant differences between groups in function or caregiver burden. Multivariate regression analyses were performed in AD groups, with function and NPS frequency as predictors of caregiver burden covarying for age, caregiver sex, and global cognitive function (MMSE). In the total AD sample, the model explained 12.6% of the variance in caregiver burden [F(5,52)=2.64, adjusted R2=0.126; p=0.033] and poor function was a significant predictor (standardized B=0.42, p=0.003) of caregiver burden. In EOAD, the model explained 17% of the variance in caregiver burden [F(5,35)=2.64, adjusted R2=0.17; p=0.04], and poor function was a significant (standardized B=0.42, p=0.015) predictor of caregiver burden; however this was not the case in LOAD. Results suggest poor function predicts caregiver burden in EOAD. Although NPS in EOAD are more frequent, this was not a predictor of caregiver burden.