J Clin Exp Neuropsychol. 2002 Sep;24(6):745-54.
Differences
in executive functioning between Alzheimer's disease and subcortical
ischemic vascular dementia.
Yuspeh
RL, Vanderploeg
RD, Crowell TA, Mullan
M.
Department of Psychology,
The present study examined the performance of 114 individuals (62 males, 52
females) on a variety of tests purported to measure executive abilities.
Participants were diagnosed with possible or probable Alzheimer's disease (AD),
subcortical ischemic vascular dementia (SVaD), or were normal controls (NoDx).
Groups were matched for age and education, and clinical groups were matched for
severity of dementia. Multivariate and univariate
analyses of variance were performed which indicated that the AD and SVaD patients differed from the NoDx
on all measures of executive functioning. Further, the AD group made
significantly more episodic memory errors than the SVaD
group. On the other hand, consistent with previous research, the SVaD group performed significantly better than the AD group
on recognition memory, but not on free recall measures. Present findings
suggest that AD patients have more executive self-monitoring problems than SVaD patients do, but SVaD
patients have more retrieval problems (executive memory search), suggesting a
fractionation of executive abilities. Thus, differences between dementia groups
depend on the nature of the executive function assessed.
Keywords: Alzheimer's disease, dementia, subcortex, ischemic, vascular, Neuropsychology