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Decline of cognitive and behavioral functions in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: a longitudinal study

Authors :
Bersano, E
Sarnelli, M
Solara, V
Iazzolino, B
Peotta, L
De Marchi, F
Facchin, A
Moglia, C
Canosa, A
Calvo, A
Chiò, A
Mazzini, L
Bersano, Enrica
Sarnelli, Maria Francesca
Solara, Valentina
Iazzolino, Barbara
Peotta, Laura
De Marchi, Fabiola
Facchin, Alessio P
Moglia, Cristina
Canosa, Antonio
Calvo, Andrea
Chiò, Adriano
Mazzini, Letizia
Bersano, E
Sarnelli, M
Solara, V
Iazzolino, B
Peotta, L
De Marchi, F
Facchin, A
Moglia, C
Canosa, A
Calvo, A
Chiò, A
Mazzini, L
Bersano, Enrica
Sarnelli, Maria Francesca
Solara, Valentina
Iazzolino, Barbara
Peotta, Laura
De Marchi, Fabiola
Facchin, Alessio P
Moglia, Cristina
Canosa, Antonio
Calvo, Andrea
Chiò, Adriano
Mazzini, Letizia
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background: A cognitive impairment, ranging from frontotemporal dementia (FTD) to milder forms of dysexecutive or behavioral dysfunction, is detected in 30-50% of patients affected by amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) at diagnosis. Such condition considerably influences the prognosis, and possibly impacts on the decision-making process with regards to end-of-life choices. The aim of our study is to examine the changes of cognitive and behavioral impairment in a large population of ALS from the time of diagnosis to a 6-month follow-up (IQR 5.5-9.0 months), and to examine to what extent the progression of cognitive impairment affects survival time and rate of disease progression.Methods: We recruited 146 ALS patients classified according to revised criteria of ALS and FTD spectrum disorder. In a multidisciplinary setting, during two subsequent visits we examined clinical features with ALSFRS-r score, FVC% and BMI, and cognitive status with an extensive neuropsychological evaluation.Results: At second examination, one-third of patients showed a worsening of cognitive impairment, namely 88% of ALSbi, 27% of ALSci, 40% of ALScbi, and, interestingly, also 24% of cognitive normal ALS developed a significant cognitive dysfunction. We find that those who changed their cognitive status presented a lower ALSFRS-r score at t1 and a shorter survival time compared to those who did not change, regardless of the type of cognitive impairment.Conclusion: We show how cognitive disorders in ALS patients can not only be present at diagnosis, but also manifest during disease and influence the progression of motor deficit and the prognosis.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
ELETTRONICO, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1308934486
Document Type :
Electronic Resource