The article compares the performance on language assessment of four matched groups of patients attending a memory clinic. Patients with a clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease and vascular dementia showed deficits on all assessments, but there were differences between the groups relating to read
Demographic and clinical features of patients attending a memory clinic
β Scribed by Dr. Osvaldo P. Almeida; Katie Hill; Robert Howard; John O'brien; Raymond Levy
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 378 KB
- Volume
- 8
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-6230
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Basic demographic and clinical features of the first 418 patients assessed at the Maudsley Memory Clinic are reported. Alzheimer's disease was the most frequent diagnosis (57%), followed by a group of patients complaining of memory problems but with no obvious neuropsychiatric diagnosis (24%). The latter were more likely to be younger unmarried self-referred women living alone and with a frequent family history of dementia. The routine use of extensive laboratory investigations in memory clinics is not recommended, considering the meagre number of subjects suffering from reversible conditions identified in our clinic. The Maudsley Memory Clinic has proved to be a popular centre for the assessment and diagnosis of patients with memory complaints and has provided a useful source of subjects for research into memory-associated disorders. The role of memory clinics in the new financial climate in the National Health Service remains to be determined.
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The aim of the study was to investigate the course of objective memory impairment in non-demented subjects who attended a memory clinic and to test predictors of outcome. Non-demented subjects (N 74) were included when they were older than 40 years and had a baseline score on the delayed recall of a
seventy-eight consecutive patients who attended a 'memory clinic' underwent a standardized clinical examination including extensive laboratory tests and cranial computed tomography (CT). This brief report evaluates the contribution of quantitative CT scan analysis to the differential diagnosis of ea
## Objective: To investigate whether mri-based volumes of whole brain, medial temporal lobe and white matter hyperintensities (wmh) predict progression of cognitive decline in a sample of nondemented elderly. ## Methods: Thirty-seven nondemented elderly attending a memory clinic and 28 elderly co