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Simple Test Offers Early Dementia Warning

The Independent

June 10, 2009

By Steve Connor

Two-page questionnaire detects 93% of patients with Alzheimer’s, scientists say

A memory test that can detect the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease has been developed by doctors who say it can be self- administered by anyone concerned about dementia.

A study found that the two-page questionnaire could detect 93 per cent of patients with Alzheimer’s disease compared to the standard dementia test which accurately detected only 52 per cent of cases. Questions included remembering a phrase, doing sums, identifying parts of a man’s suit and drawing the time on a blank clock face.

Jeremy Brown, a consultant neurologist at Addenbrooke’s Hospital in Cambridge, who helped to devise the “test your memory” (TYM) test, said its great advantage was that patients could fill in the form themselves – although it must be left to doctors to diagnose the illness. “It’s a new screening test for Alzheimer’s disease. It’s not a diagnostic test but a test that allows a quick screening of patients with memory complaints to sort out those who need to be sent on for further assessment,” Mr Brown said.

“The current standard test, called the mini-mental state examination, has been around for 50 years and takes about eight minutes to complete. It is not particularly sensitive in detecting Alzheimer’s disease, whereas the new test can be filled in by the patients themselves and it only takes about a minute for the doctor to make an assessment,” he said.

The TYM test is made up of 10 tasks designed to assess a person’s mental abilities in areas such as semantic knowledge, calculation, verbal fluency, spatial knowledge and mental recall.

It is designed so that most healthy people with no educational problems would be able to score highly, achieving near to the maximum of 50 points. People with Alzheimer’s tend to score an average of 33 points out of 50 and people with mild cognitive impairment score an average of 45 out of 50.

The study involved 540 healthy individuals and a further 139 patients diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease. “The TYM can be completed quickly and accurately by normal controls [healthy people]. It is a powerful and valid screening test for the detection of Alzheimer’s disease,” the authors wrote in the British Medical Journal.

Originally published by By Steve Connor SCIENCE EDITOR.

© 2009 Independent, The; London (UK). Provided by ProQuest LLC. All rights Reserved.

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    bytestyle12

    4 days ago

    198 comments

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  • Photo_user_blank_big

    seolivingindia

    5 months ago

    0 comments

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  • Photo_user_banned_big

    Markalister

    8 months ago

    12 comments

    They wouldn't even need to book an extra appointment. and would save money on potential drugs in the future. cash advance online

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    Account Removed

    over 2 years ago

    I may just be being cynical here but since Alzheimer's is often diagnosed on no more than clinical judgement, and since the trial of this test was conducted against a background of existing Alzheimer's diagnosis isn't the whole methodology likely to be a little flawed?

    I'm also a little concerned about the small size of the sample and the fact that it didn't mention how many 'false positives' were there alongside the 'positives'.

    I wonder if this has come along to provide an easy antidote now that the mini-mental test has been discredited as a method of assessing mental capacity.

    Cheers,

    Stuart

  • N517246546_50991_9536_max50

    wrightv88

    over 2 years ago

    10 comments

    Does anyone know where I can access this test?

  • 30dfd91a0c6d46dbad02151799c18bb4_max50

    Russ

    over 2 years ago

    216 comments

    My thoughts exactly! Whatever happened to common sense...?

  • Photo_user_blank_big

    sahsee

    over 2 years ago

    8 comments

    If it only takes one minute why on earth haven't the government made it an official yearly test that patient could complete on any random visit to their GP.They wouldn't even need to book an extra appointment. and would save money on potential drugs in the future.

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