IBIMOL   23987
INSTITUTO DE BIOQUIMICA Y MEDICINA MOLECULAR PROFESOR ALBERTO BOVERIS
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Cerebrovascular disease with and without Stroke: Different cognitive and clinical profiles
Autor/es:
RAÚL O. DOMÍNGUEZ; ENRIQUE R. MARSCHOFF; EDUARDO L. BARTOLOMÉ; ARTURO L. FAMULARI; JORGE A. SERRA
Revista:
Current Trends in Neurology
Editorial:
Research Trends
Referencias:
Lugar: Kerala, India; Año: 2010 vol. 3 p. 45 - 55
ISSN:
0972-8252
Resumen:
ABSTRACT PAGE Cerebrovascular disease (CVD) patients with and without stroke were compared using clinical and neurological criteria, Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) and cognitive impairment including dementia. The sample comprised 143 CVD outpatients (86 males, 60.14%): Stroke (n=88), Non-Stroke (n=55). Neurological and MRI assessment, the Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR: Normal, Questionable, non-demented; and Mild, Moderate, demented); the Alzheimer´s Disease Assessment Scale (ADAS-Cog), and the Trail Making Tests A (TMT-A) and B (TMT-B) were performed in all patients. Clinical, neurological and MRI results yielded statistically significant differences between patient groups (0.0001<P<0.05). Under Normal, Questionable and Mild CDR stages the Stroke group performed ADAS-Cog significantly worse (P<0.0001), showing non-significant differences in the Moderate stage. TMT time was always greater in the Stroke patients, while TMT errors resulted significantly greater in the Non-Stroke patient group (0.0001<P<0.002). The TMT-B/TMT-A ratio and the difference (B-A) were greater in the Non-Stroke patients (0.0001<P<0.001). At Moderate CDR the TMT’s showed no differences. Stroke and Non-Stroke CVD patients behave differently concerning several clinical, neurological and MRI results. Cognitive tests differ between groups when impairment has not reached the Moderate stage; further evolution turns both groups undistinguishable. Functional and cognitive impairment present a convincing linear association.