Clinical use of SAND battery to evaluate language in patients with Progressive Supranuclear Palsy
Autoři:
Marina Picillo aff001; Sofia Cuoco aff001; Immacolata Carotenuto aff001; Filomena Abate aff001; Roberto Erro aff001; Giampiero Volpe aff001; Maria Teresa Pellecchia aff001; Eleonora Catricalà aff002; Stefano Cappa aff002; Paolo Barone aff001
Působiště autorů:
Center for Neurodegenerative diseases (CEMAND), Department of Medicine, Surgery and Dentistry, Neuroscience section, University of Salerno, Salerno, Italy
aff001; University School for Advanced Studies IUSS Pavia, Pavia, Italy
aff002; IRCCS San Giovanni di Dio Fatebenefratelli, Brescia, Italy
aff003
Vyšlo v časopise:
PLoS ONE 14(10)
Kategorie:
Research Article
prolekare.web.journal.doi_sk:
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223621
Souhrn
Background
Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP) patients present language disturbances in tasks like naming, repetition, reading, word comprehension and semantic association compared to Parkinson’s disease (PD) and healthy controls (HC).
Objective
In the present study we sought to validate a Screening for Aphasia in NeuroDegeneration (SAND) battery version specifically tailored on PSP patients and to describe language impairment in relation to PSP disease phenotype and cognitive status.
Methods and results
Fifty-one PSP [23 with Richardson’s syndrome (PSP-RS), 10 with predominant parkinsonism (PSP-P) and 18 with the other variant syndromes of PSP (vPSP)], 28 PD and 30 HC were enrolled in the present study. By excluding the tasks with poor acceptability (i.e., writing and picture description tasks) and increasing the items related to the remaining tasks, we showed that the PSP-tailored SAND Global Score is an acceptable, consistent and reliable tool to screen language disturbances in PSP. However, we failed to detect major differences in language involvement according to disease phenotype. Differently, we showed that patients with dementia present worse language performances.
Conclusions
Taking into account specific disease features, the combination of the SAND subscores included in the PSP-tailored SAND better represents language abilities in PSP. Furthermore, we showed that language disturbances feature PSP patients irrespective of disease phenotype, but parallels the deterioration of the global cognitive function.
Klíčová slova:
Diagnostic medicine – Cognitive impairment – Behavior – Dementia – Language – Semantics – Parkinson disease – Sentence processing
Zdroje
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