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September 1, 1989

The Consortium to Establish a Registry for Alzheimer's Disease (CERAD). Part I. Clinical and neuropsychological assesment of Alzheimer's disease

September 1989 issue
39 (9) 1159

Abstract

The Consortium to Establish a Registry for Alzheimer's Disease (CERAD) has developed brief, comprehensive, and reliable batteries of clinical and neuropsychological tests for assessment of patients with the clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease (AD). We administered these batteries in a standardized manner to more than 350 subjects with a diagnosis of AD and 275 control subjects who were enrolled in a nationwide registry by a consortium of 16 university medical centers. The tests selected for this study measured the primary cognitive manifestations of AD across a range of severity of the disorder, and discriminated between normal subjects and those with mild and moderate dementia. The batteries also detected deterioration of language, memory, praxis, and general intellectual status in subjects returning for reassessment 1 year later. Interrater and testretest reliabilities were substantial. Long-term observations of this cohort are in progress in an effort to validate the clinical and neuropsychological assessments and to confirm the diagnosis by postmortem examinations. Although information on validation is limited thus far, the CERAD batteries appear to fill a need for a standardized, easily administered, and reliable instrument for evaluating persons with AD in multicenter research studies as well as in clinical practice.

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Published In

Neurology®
Volume 39Number 9September 1989
Pages: 1159
PubMed: 2771064

Publication History

Published online: September 1, 1989
Published in print: September 1989

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Affiliations & Disclosures

Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO (Dr. Morrie)
Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC (Drs. Heyman, Fillenbaum. and Clark)
Mount Sinai Medical Center, New York, NY (Dr. Mob)
University of Washington, Seattle, WA (J.P. Hughesand Dr. van Belle)
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD (Dr. Mellita)

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