Qualitative Comparison of Semantic Memory Impairment in Patients with Amnestic Mild Cognitive Impairment Based on β-Amyloid Status.
- Author:
Ji Eun KIM
1
;
So Hee PARK
;
Yun Jeong HONG
;
Jihye HWANG
;
Noh Eul HAN
;
Sun Mi LEE
;
Jee Hoon ROH
;
Jae Seung KIM
;
Jae Hong LEE
Author Information
- Publication Type:Original Article
- Keywords: Alzheimer's disease; mild cognitive impairment; semantic memory; β-amyloid
- MeSH: Aging; Alzheimer Disease; Animals; Brain; Dementia; Follow-Up Studies; Humans; Memory*; Memory, Episodic; Mild Cognitive Impairment*; Pathology; Semantics*; Word Association Tests
- From:Journal of Clinical Neurology 2019;15(1):27-37
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:English
- Abstract: BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Semantic memory remains more stable than episodic memory across the lifespan, which makes it potentially useful as a marker for distinguishing pathological aging from normal senescence. To obtain a better understanding of the transitional stage evolving into Alzheimer's dementia (AD), we focused on the amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI) stage stratified based on β-amyloid (Aβ) pathology. METHODS: We analyzed the raw data from Korean version of the Boston Naming Test (K-BNT) and the Controlled Oral Word Association Test (COWAT). For K-BNT, the frequencies of six error types and accuracy rates were evaluated. For a qualitative assessment of the COWAT, we computed the number of switching, number of clusters, and mean cluster size. RESULTS: The data from 217 participants were analyzed (53 normal controls, 66 with Aβ− aMCI, 56 with Aβ+ aMCI, and 42 disease controls). There were fewer semantically related errors and more semantically unrelated errors on the K-BNT in Aβ+ aMCI than in Aβ− aMCI, without a gross difference in the z score. We also found that Aβ+ aMCI showed a more prominent deficit in the number of clusters in the semantic fluency task [especially for animal names (living items)] than Aβ− aMCI. CONCLUSIONS: In spite of similar clinical manifestations, Aβ+ aMCI was more similar to AD than Aβ− aMCI in terms of semantic memory disruption. Semantic memory may serve as an early indicator of brain Aβ pathology. Therefore, semantic memory dysfunction deserves more consideration in clinical practice. Longitudinal research with the follow-up data is needed.