1.Study of Event-related Brain Potential in Children with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder.
Li ZHU ; Quan ZENG ; Yangting JIANG ; Jia CHEN ; Liying ZHANG
Journal of Biomedical Engineering 2016;33(1):161-166
This study aims to explore the differences of event-related potential (ERP) between attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and normal children, so that these differences provide scientific basis for the diagnosis of ADHD. Eight children were identified to be ADHD group by the diagnostic criteria of DSM-IV (diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders-IV), and the control group also consisted of 8 normal children. Modified visual-continuous performance test (CPT) was used as the experiment paradigm. The experiment included two major conditions, i. e. Go and NoGo. All the 16 subjects participated in the study. A high density EEG acquisition instrument was used to record the EEG signal and processed these EEG data by means of ERP and spectrum analysis. P2-N2 peak-peak value and spectral peak around 11 Hz were analyzed between ADHD subjects and those in the control group, and then statistical tests were applied to these two groups. Results showed that: (1) Under the condition of Go, ADHD group had a significant lower P2-N2 peak-peak value than the values in the control group (P < 0.05); but under the condition of NoGo there was no significant difference in between. (2) Compared with the control group, the ADHD group had significant lower spectral amplitude around 11 Hz under the condition of NoGo (P < 0.05). However, under the condition of Go the difference was insignificant. In conclusion, there is certain cognitive dysfunction in ADHD children. P2-N2 peak-peak value and spectral peak around 11 Hz could be considered as clinical evaluation indexes of ADHD children's cognitive function. These two objective indexes provide an early diagnosis and effective treatment of ADHD.
Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity
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diagnosis
;
physiopathology
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Brain
;
physiopathology
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Case-Control Studies
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Child
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Cognition Disorders
;
diagnosis
;
physiopathology
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Electroencephalography
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Evoked Potentials
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Humans
2.Clinical characteristics and cognitive function of unipolar and bipolar depression.
Yi CAI ; Weiping KUANG ; Tiansheng GUO ; Lin YAN ; Juanjuan ZHU ; Hongxian CHEN
Journal of Central South University(Medical Sciences) 2012;37(11):1152-1155
OBJECTIVE:
To determine the clinical characteristics and cognitive dysfunction of bipolar depression and unipolar depression.
METHODS:
Fifty patients with unipolar depression, 48 bipolar depression, and 50 normal controls were assessed with Hamilton Depression Scale, Hamilton Anxiety Scale, Life Events Scale, and The Wisconsin Card Sorting Test. General demographic data, clinical data, and the scores of recognitive function in the 3 groups were compared.
RESULTS:
The patients with bipolar depression occured at young age and had obvious family history compared with those with unipolar depression. The patients with bipolar or unipolar disorders had lower scores in most neuropsychological tests than those in the control group (P<0.05). The patients with bipolar depression in understanding memory and Wisconsin card sorting test were worse than those with unipolar depression (P<0.05).
CONCLUSION
There is cognitive dysfunction in patients with bipolar or unipolar disorder. Understanding memory and executive function damage may be cognitive features in bipolar disorder.
Adolescent
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Adult
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Bipolar Disorder
;
complications
;
diagnosis
;
physiopathology
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China
;
Cognition
;
physiology
;
Cognition Disorders
;
complications
;
physiopathology
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Depressive Disorder
;
complications
;
diagnosis
;
physiopathology
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Female
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Humans
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Male
;
Neuropsychological Tests
;
Young Adult
3.Characteristics of Agraphia in Chinese Patients with Alzheimer's Disease and Amnestic Mild Cognitive Impairment.
Jiong ZHOU ; Biao JIANG ; Xian-Hong HUANG ; Lin-Lin KONG ; Hong-Lei LI
Chinese Medical Journal 2016;129(13):1553-1557
BACKGROUNDPatients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) manifest progressive decline in writing abilities. Most studies on agraphia in AD have been performed in the alphabetic system, such as English. However, these findings may not be applicable to other written language systems. The unique features of the Chinese written script could affect the patterns of agraphia in Chinese AD patients. The aim of this study was to explore the features of writing errors in Chinese patients with AD and amnestic mild cognitive impairment (a-MCI), as well as to study the relationship between their writing errors and neuropsychological functions.
METHODSIn this study, we performed an observational study in a group of subjects including 17 AD patients, 14 patients with a-MCI, and 16 elderly healthy controls. We analyzed the writing errors in these subjects and also studied the relationship between their writing errors and neuropsychological functions.
RESULTSOur study showed that in patients whose mother tongue is Chinese, writing ability was comparatively well preserved in the MCI phase but significantly impaired when the disease progressed to the stage of AD. The writing errors showed corresponding increase with the severity of cognition decline, both in the types of errors and rate of occurrence. Analysis of the writing errors showed that word substitution and unintelligible words were the most frequent error types that occurred in all the three study groups. The occurrence rate of unintelligible words was significantly higher in the AD group compared with the a-MCI group (P = 0.024) and control group (P = 0.018). In addition, the occurrence rates of word substitution were also significantly higher in AD (P = 0.013) and a-MCI groups (P = 0.037) than that of control group. However, errors such as totally no response, visuospatial impairment, paragraph agraphia, ideograph, and perseverative writing errors were only seen in AD group. Besides, we also found a high occurrence rate of visuoconstructional errors (13.3%) in our AD group.
CONCLUSIONSOur study confirmed that agraphia is an important feature in patients with AD. The writing error profile in patients whose native language is Chinese was unique compared to patients using the alphabetic language system.
Aged ; Agraphia ; diagnosis ; physiopathology ; Alzheimer Disease ; complications ; physiopathology ; Asian Continental Ancestry Group ; Cognition Disorders ; diagnosis ; physiopathology ; Cognitive Dysfunction ; diagnosis ; physiopathology ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Neuropsychological Tests
4.Cognitive profile of children with newly onset benign epilepsy with centro-temporal spikes before treatment:a study of computerized cognitive testing in epilepsy.
Qian CHEN ; Dazhi CHENG ; Tong ZHENG ; Zhijie GAO ; Guizhen ZHANG ; Xiuxian YAN ; Xinlin ZHOU ; Guifang LUO ; Keming XU
Chinese Journal of Pediatrics 2015;53(10):754-759
OBJECTIVEBenign epilepsy with centro-temporal spikes (BECTs) is a common idiopathic partial epileptic syndrome in childhood, which often affect the pre-school and school-age children and a considerable proportion have comorbidity including lower academic achievement and cognitive impairment. Few studies involved the psychocognitive assessment in such a drug-treatable epileptic syndrome especially in the newly diagnosed and medications-naive group. This study aimed to investigate the cognitive characteristics of children with newly onset BECTs before treatment.
METHODForty-one outpatients with newly diagnosed BECTs who visited the Clinic during the periods from October 2012 to May 2014 before the medications against epilepsy and 41 healthy controls recruited from regular school in Beijing during the period from July 2013 to March 2014, who matched in age and gender underwent battery testing by computerized cognitive testing in epilepsy (CCTE). The BECTs group included 41 children, 20 boys and 21 girls, mean age (8.2 ± 1.7) years, the age of onset of epilepsy 4.5-11.5 years (the age of onset <8 years in 25 cases, ≥ 8 years in 16 cases). The cognitive characteristics and associated factors were analyzed. The primary data including correct answer numbers and reaction times were analyzed by independent sample t-test between the two groups of children with BECTs and healthy controls based on SPSS 18.0 statistical software.
RESULTRaw data of 9 tasks' scores collected from BECTs and healthy control children were continuous variables in accordance with normal distribution. BECTs children performed significantly worse than controls in choice reaction time ((618+158) vs. (524+254) ms), three-dimensional mental rotation (11 ± 10 vs. 18 ± 12) and visual tracing (10 ± 6 vs.15 ± 6), t=2.01, 3.03 and 3.47, P<0.05, <0.01 and <0.001, respectively.While other 6 tasks showed no significant difference between the two groups (P>0.05 for all comparisons). BECTs boys performed significantly worse than girls on simple substraction tasks compared with standard nine score ((4.7 ± 1.5) vs. (5.6 ± 1.2), t=-2.24, P<0.05). Other 8 tasks showed no significant difference between boys and girls (P>0.05 for all comparisons). Other 9 tasks showed no significant differences between the two groups of BECTs children whose age of onset was before 8 years and those who started seizure ≥ 8 years (P all >0.05). The standard nine scores of simple substraction from the three BECTs groups of dominance sides of spikes and waves during NREM showed significant difference (P<0.05). BECTs children with bilateral discharges performed significantly worse than the other two groups dominantly right or left discharges (4.7 ± 1.2 vs. 6.0 ± 1.2 vs. 4.9 ± 1.4, P all <0.05). There was no significant difference between the two groups with right and left side dominance discharges (P>0.05). Other 8 tasks showed no significant differences among the three groups (P>0.05 for all comparisons).
CONCLUSIONAlthough EEG discharges index below 50% during NREM period, while newly diagnosed BECTs children before treatment with medications against epilepsy performed poorer on tasks of choice reaction time, three-dimensional mental rotation, and visual tracing. The two factors of male and bilateral discharges during NREM period correlate with dysfunction of simple subtraction, the mechanism needs further study and the cognitive function of epilepsy children should be evaluated and followed up, in order to provide psychologic baseline data for persistent cognitive disturbance.
Beijing ; Case-Control Studies ; Child ; Child, Preschool ; Cognition ; Cognition Disorders ; diagnosis ; Comorbidity ; Epilepsy, Rolandic ; physiopathology ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Reaction Time ; Seizures ; physiopathology
5.Seoul Neuropsychological Screening Battery-Dementia Version (SNSB-D): A Useful Tool for Assessing and Monitoring Cognitive Impairments in Dementia Patients.
Hyun Jung AHN ; Juhee CHIN ; Aram PARK ; Byung Hwa LEE ; Mee Kyung SUH ; Sang Won SEO ; Duk L NA
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2010;25(7):1071-1076
The Seoul Neuropsychological Screening Battery (SNSB) is one of the standardized neuropsychological test batteries widely used in Korea. However, it may be a bit too lengthy for patients with decreased attention span; and it does not provide the score of global cognitive function (GCF), which is useful for monitoring patients longitudinally. We sought to validate a dementia version of SNSB (SNSB-D) that was shorter than the original SNSB and contained only scorable tests with a GCF score of 300. We administered SNSB-D to patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) (n=43) and Alzheimer's disease (AD) (n=93), and normal controls (NC) (n=77). MCI and AD groups had GCF scores significantly different from NC group, and GCF scores were able to distinguish patients with Clinical Dementia Rating of 0.5 and 1. Test-retest reliability was high, with a correlation coefficient of 0.918 for AD, 0.999 for MCI, and 0.960 for NC. The GCF score significantly correlated with the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE). Through ROC-curve analysis, GCF scores were found to yield more accurate diagnoses than the MMSE. The SNSB-D is a valid, reliable tool for assessing the overall cognitive function, and can be used to monitor cognitive changes in patients with dementia.
Alzheimer Disease/diagnosis/physiopathology
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Cognition Disorders/*diagnosis/etiology/physiopathology
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Dementia/complications/*diagnosis/physiopathology
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Humans
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Korea
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*Neuropsychological Tests/standards
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ROC Curve
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Reproducibility of Results
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Severity of Illness Index
6.Cerebellar cognitive affective syndrome in pediatric patients: clinical analysis of 13 cases.
Xia ZHAO ; Xin-Guo LU ; Jian-Xiang LIAO
Chinese Journal of Contemporary Pediatrics 2007;9(4):387-389
Adolescent
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Cerebellar Diseases
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diagnosis
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drug therapy
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etiology
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Cerebellum
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physiopathology
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Child
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Child, Preschool
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Cognition Disorders
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diagnosis
;
drug therapy
;
etiology
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Female
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Humans
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Infant
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Male
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Mood Disorders
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diagnosis
;
drug therapy
;
etiology
7.Change of Cognitive Function and Associated Factors among the Rural Elderly: A 5-Year Follow-up Study.
Sang Kyu KIM ; Pock Soo KANG ; Tae Yoon HWANG ; Joon SAKONG ; Kyeong Soo LEE
Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health 2007;40(2):162-168
OBJECTIVES: This prospective population-based cohort study was conducted to evaluate the risk factors of cognitive impairment and the degree of cognitive function change through a 5-year follow-up. METHODS: The baseline and follow-up surveys were conducted in 1998 and 2003, respectively. Among 176 subjects who had normal cognitive function in the baseline study, 136 were followed up for 5 years. The cognitive function was investigated using the Korean version of the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE-K). The collected data were analyzed using SPSS and Stata. RESULTS: Of the 136 subjects analyzed, 25 (18.4%) were cognitively impaired. Old age and low social support in the baseline survey were risk factors for cognitive impairment after 5 years. In the generalized estimating equation for 128 subjects except severe cognitive impairment about the contributing factors of cognitive function change, the interval of 5 years decreased MMSE-K score by 1.02 and the cognitive function was adversely affected with increasing age, decreasing education and decreasing social support. CONCLUSIONS: Although the study population was small, it was considered that the study results can be used to develop a community-based prevention system for cognitive impairment.
*Rural Health
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Neuropsychological Tests
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Male
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Korea
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Humans
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Follow-Up Studies
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Female
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Cognition Disorders/*diagnosis/physiopathology
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Aged, 80 and over
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Aged
8.Magnetic resonance spectroscopy in the diagnosis of cognitive impairment in AIDS patients.
Ling WANG ; Da-peng SHI ; Xiong HAN ; Qing-xia ZHAO ; Bin YAN ; Hong-jun LI
Chinese Medical Journal 2011;124(9):1342-1345
BACKGROUNDThe pathological abnormalities of the AIDS patients lie in the subcortical regions of the brain, specifically the deep white matter and basal ganglia, while the extent of pathology generally correlates with the severity of cognitive impairments in the white matter and basal ganglia. Brain metabolite changes of these lesions can reflect the pathological abnormalities. The purpose of this study was to assess the value of magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) in the diagnosis of cognitive impairment in AIDS patients.
METHODS3.0T MR was used to measure N-acetyl aspartate (NAA), choline (Cho), myo-inositol (MI) and creatinine (Cr) in the frontal white matter, basal ganglia and parietal cortex of 21 AIDS patients with dementia complex (ADC), 19 AIDS patients with neuroasymptomatic (NAS) and 20 seronegative (SN) controls. Then we compared the difference of metabolic rate between AIDS patients and SN groups.
RESULTSNAA/Cr (mean = 1.2502, SD = 0.1600) was significantly decreased and Cho/Cr (mean = 1.2028, SD = 1.1655) was increased in the frontal white matter in ADC group, while NAA/Cr (mean = 1.5334, SD = 0.0513) was reduced in NAS group when compared with SN group. NAA/Cr in the basal ganglia was decreased in both ADC and NAS groups (mean = 1.2625, SD = 0.1615 and mean = 1.5278, SD = 0.0380, respectively). Cho/Cr (mean = 1.1631, SD = 0.0981) was markedly increased in ADC group. Although NAA/Cr, Cho/Cr and MI/Cr in the parietal cortex had a certain change in both ADC and NAS groups compared with SN group, the differences were not statistically significant.
CONCLUSIONSThe brain metabolite changes of AIDS patients are correlated with cognitive impairments. MRS can be used as a valuable inspection method to assess cognitive impairments in AIDS patients.
Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome ; physiopathology ; Adolescent ; Adult ; Cognition Disorders ; diagnosis ; Female ; Humans ; Magnetic Resonance Imaging ; methods ; Male ; Young Adult
9.Macrostructure of sleep in patients with vascular cognitive impairment-no dementia.
Mu-feng ZHU ; Li-ying DENG ; Li-min GONG ; Hao LIU ; Yong-min DING
Journal of Southern Medical University 2011;31(2):295-298
OBJECTIVETo investigate the sleep structure in patients with vascular cognitive impairment-no dementia (VCI-ND) and its differences from that of normal individuals.
METHODSThe whole night sleep record of 20 patients with VCI-ND were monitored by 32-head video-taped polysomnographic system, and the results were compared with the data of 20 normal subjects.
RESULTSCompared with normal subjects, patients with VCI-ND showed significantly reduced total sleep duration, increased waking times, increased stage 1 sleep, decreased stage 2 sleep, decreased stage 3 sleep, decreased rapid eye movement stage (REM) and reduced sleep efficiency.
CONCLUSIONIncreased light sleep as well as decreased slow-wave stage 3-4 sleep and decreased REM stage may be a specific electroneurophysiologic marker for VCI-ND, but large-sampled multi-centered randomized controlled trial is necessary to test the validity of these features as specific markers for screening and early diagnostic purposes.
Aged ; Case-Control Studies ; Cognition Disorders ; diagnosis ; etiology ; physiopathology ; Dementia, Vascular ; diagnosis ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Polysomnography ; Sleep ; physiology ; Sleep Stages ; Sleep Wake Disorders ; etiology ; Stroke ; complications
10.Sex differences in brain stem auditory evoked potentials and P300 examination in patients with mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease.
Wei CHEN ; Jian-qin WANG ; Ling-ju ZHANG
Journal of Zhejiang University. Medical sciences 2005;34(2):172-176
OBJECTIVETo compare the sex differences on brain stem auditory evoked potentials (BAEP) and P300 in the elderly patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and the patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD).
METHODSThirty-eight elderly patients with MCI, 26 cases of AD and 20 health controls (HC) were examined with BAEP, P300 . Sex difference of the variables was compared inter-and intra-groups.
RESULTSSignificant sex differences of BAEP were found in the latency period wave III, V of left side in the MCI group (P <0.01), in the latency period wave IV, V of left side in HC group (P<0.01), and no such differences were found in AD group. The females had longer latency period in P300 measurement than males in MCI group (P <0.01), but there were no significant differences within AD or HC groups. The males showed significant differences in wave I, II in left side between the MCI and AD groups. The males also showed significant difference in wave I, III approximate, equals V in left side, wave IV in right side between AD and HC groups, and so did the females in wave I approximate, equals V in both sides. The males had significant difference in the left wave III, IV and right wave I, IV, V between MCI and HC groups, and so did the females in right side wave I, II, V. In P300, longer latency waves were found in AD group than in MCI group. Both sexes showed significant differences in the latency of Fz, Cz, Pz between AD and HC groups, but no significant differences were found in the latency of Fz, Cz, Pz in the females between the MCI and HC groups.
CONCLUSIONSex differences were found in the examination of both BAEP and P300 in MCI group, but not in AD group. The people of same sex have different expression of BAEP and P300 among MCI, AD and HC groups, suggesting the sex difference should be considered in the differential diagnosis.
Aged ; Aged, 80 and over ; Alzheimer Disease ; diagnosis ; physiopathology ; Cognition Disorders ; diagnosis ; physiopathology ; Diagnosis, Differential ; Event-Related Potentials, P300 ; Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Brain Stem ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Sex Factors