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Neurology 1999;53:1983
© 1999 American Academy of Neurology


Articles

Error behaviors associated with loss of competency in Alzheimer’s disease

D. C. Marson, JD, PhD, S. M. Annis, MS, B. McInturff, BS, A. Bartolucci, PhD and L. E. Harrell, MD, PhD

From the Department of Neurology (Dr. Marson, S.M. Annis, B. McInturff, and Dr. Harrell), Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center (Drs. Marson and Harrell), Center for Aging (Drs. Marson and Harrell), Departments of Psychology (S.M. Annis) and Biostatistics (Dr. Bartolucci), University of Alabama at Birmingham; and the Neurology Service (Dr. Harrell), Birmingham VA Medical Center, Birmingham, AL.

Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Daniel C. Marson, Department of Neurology, JT1216, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL 35233-7243.

OBJECTIVE: To investigate qualitative behavioral changes associated with declining medical decision-making capacity (competency) in patients with AD.

BACKGROUND: Qualitative measures can yield clinical information about functional changes in neurologic disease not available through quantitative measures.

METHODS: Normal older controls (n = 21) and patients with mild and moderate probable AD (n = 72) were compared using a standardized competency measure and neuropsychological measures. A system of 16 qualitative error scores representing conceptual domains of language, executive dysfunction, affective dysfunction, and compensatory responses was used to analyze errors produced on the competency measure. Patterns of errors were examined across groups. Relationships between error behaviors and competency performance were determined, and neurocognitive correlates of specific error behaviors were identified.

RESULTS: AD patients demonstrated more miscomprehension, factual confusion, intrusions, incoherent responses, nonresponsive answers, loss of task, and delegation than controls. Errors in the executive domain (loss of task, nonresponsive answer, and loss of detachment) were key predictors of declining competency performance by AD patients. Neuropsychological analyses in the AD group generally confirmed the conceptual domain assignments of the qualitative scores.

CONCLUSIONS: Loss of task, nonresponsive answers, and loss of detachment were key behavioral changes associated with declining competency of AD patients and with neurocognitive measures of executive dysfunction. These findings support the growing linkage between executive dysfunction and competency loss.

Key words: Qualitative assessment—Mental competency—AD—Neuropsychology.




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