Vol 6 n° 4
- Mild Cognitive Impairment
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3 9 6
Poster
Neuropsychological methods in
mild cognitive impairment
Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is a concept that was
introduced by Flicker et al
1
and the Mayo Clinic group
2,3
to fill the gap between cognitive changes associated with
normal aging and those associated with dementia. The
concept of MCI draws attention to cognitive distur-
bances that occur before the clinical diagnosis of demen-
tia. The cognitive changes, measured by neuropsycho-
logical test scores, indicate deviation from normal aging
and do not involve loss of autonomy. Nevertheless, these
MCI criteria are not fully specified or generally agreed
upon. As a consequence, studies of MCI conducted by
different research groups have divergent results (eg, the
number of patients with MCI who develop frank demen-
tia of the Alzheimers type in follow-up studies).
3-5
Heterogeneity of the MCI population
In 2001, an international group of experts suggested the
subdivision of MCI into three subcategories
6
:
Amnestic MCI
, characterized by memory complaint,
preservation of activities of daily living, and objective
and isolated memory impairment (compared with age
and education norms).
Multiple cognitive domain MCI
, characterized by mul-
tiple areas of cognitive impairment (without associated
memory deficit) not sufficiently severe to constitute
dementia.
Single cognitive domain (other than memory) MCI
,
characterized by a deficit of a specific domain as apha-
sia or executive dysfunction reflecting prodromal pri-
mary progressive aphasia or frontotemporal dementia.
In order to limit the heterogeneity of the population
concerned by MCI, it will soon be possible to identify
the underlying pathological disorders before the affected
patients meet the criteria of dementia
(Table I)
, using
specific neuropsychological assessments and, in some
cases, neuroimaging.This is the case, for example, for the
following:
Frontotemporal degeneration
can be identified well
before the stage of clinical dementia in the presence of
apathy and/or behavioral disinhibition coupled with a
progressive disturbance in executive functions.
Primary progressive aphasia
can be identified early on
the basis of anomia with speech apraxia and phonetic
disintegration associated with limited atrophy of left
perisylvian region.
Copyright © 2004 LLS SAS. All rights reserved
The concept of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) was introduced to fill the gap between cogni-
tive changes associated with normal aging and those associated with dementia. Such cognitive
changes indicate a deviation from normal aging, but are insufficient to evoke dementia and do
not indicate loss of autonomy. MCI is thus a transitional state before dementia. MCI covers a
range of disorders and raises the question of population heterogeneity; three MCI subcategories
have been defined to reduce this heterogeneity. Recognizing MCI is only a first step; for a given
patient, it is more important to try to identify the disease responsible, which is now possible using
neuropsychology and neuroimaging. Here, we introduce the concept of prodromal stage for
various degenerative diseases, and propose replacement of the amnestic MCI subcategory with
prodromal Alzheimers disease, for which we present the neuropsychological characteristics.