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Detection of Alzheimer disease in individuals with Down syndrome.
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1995
Year
Comprehensive BaselineNeuropsychologyPsychologyGeriatric NeurologyAlzheimer's DiseaseNeurologyAging-associated DiseaseMental RetardationHealth SciencesDown SyndromePsychiatryGeriatricsVascular DementiaCognitive FunctionAlzheimer DiseaseNeurodegenerationRisk FactorsNeurodegenerative DiseasesDementiaFrontotemporal DementiaNeuroscienceMedicine
A comprehensive baseline of emotional functioning was established for adults with Down syndrome. Five emotional factors were studied using groups of (a) adults with Down syndrome (n = 30), (b) clinical control subjects with dementia of the Alzheimer type (n = 18), and (c) elderly control subjects without mental retardation (n = 25). Results of planned statistical comparisons showed indifference, pragnosia, and inappropriateness as primary emotional factors separating Down syndrome and Alzheimer disease groups from elderly control subjects without mental retardation. Indifference was also shown to covary with cognitive mental state, whereby increased levels of indifference were associated with decreased levels of cognitive functioning. The possibility of noncognitive variables signalling dementia of the Alzheimer type in individuals with Down syndrome was discussed.