By Neil Osterweil, Senior
Associate Editor, MedPage Today
Reviewed by Zalman S. Agus, MD; Emeritus Professor at the University of
Pennsylvania School of Medicine.
May 31, 2007
ST. LOUIS, May 31 — The appearance of passive personality
traits in an older adult with signs of dementia may signal the presence
of Lewy bodies rather than Alzheimer's disease, said investigators here.
Among 290 older adults in a longitudinal study, specific personality
traits involving social withdrawal and purposeless hyperactivity helped
distinguish between the two types of dementia, wrote James E. Galvin,
M.D., M.P.H., of the Alzheimer Disease Research Center at Washington
University School of Medicine, and colleagues.
"Our results suggest that incorporating
a brief, simple inventory of personality traits may improve the identification
of individuals with dementia with Lewy bodies," reported the investigators
in the May 29 issue of Neurology.
Early identification of dementia helps patients
and families plan for the inevitable decline in cognitive function, the
authors noted.
"Much effort has focused on the cognitive symptoms
of dementia syndromes, such as impairments in memory, visuospatial, attention,
and executive function," they wrote. "An alternative approach
to improve early detection is to study noncognitive symptoms such as
behavioral and personality changes that may precede diagnosis or occur
early in the course of the dementia."
The mean age of the study patients was 77.6 + 9.9
years, and the sample included 128 patients with dementia with Lewy bodies,
128 patients with Alzheimer's disease, and 34 controls who did not have
dementia.
In annual interviews with a collateral source, such
as a spouse or caregiver, the investigators asked whether the patients
had specific changes in their personalities, interests, and drives, based
on items from the Blessed Dementia Scale.
The primary outcome measure was a change from no
dementia to dementia, with risk factors calculated using chi-square and
Fischer exact tests. The authors also performed factor analysis to determine
underlying structure and receiver operating characteristic curves assessing
the ability for each of three derived factors to discriminate Lewy body
dementia from Alzheimer's.
Over a mean of 4.8 visits (range one to 14), the
authors identified four personality traits that could distinguish dementia
with Lewy bodies from Alzheimer's. These were:
Diminished emotional responsiveness (P=0.004)
Relinquishing hobbies (P=0.01)
Growing apathy (P=0.03)
Purposeless hyperactivity (P=0.003)
On factor analyses of the Blessed Dementia
Scale items, the authors found that the four factors above, rated as
passive symptoms, explained 10.4% of variance, and were significantly
more likely to be seen among patients with dementia with Lewy bodies
than among those with Alzheimer's disease (P=0.001).
In addition, the researchers said, any personality
change was associated with the occurrence of visual hallucinations.
Taken together, the four passive factors successfully
discriminated one type of dementia from the other, as measured by an
area under the curve of 0.61 (95% CI, 0.54 to 0.68, P=0.006).
"We
also found that, compared with non-demented older adults, there is a
general dementia phenotype of increased rigidity, increased egocentricity,
loss of concern for the feelings of others, coarsening of affect, and
impaired emotional control," the authors
wrote.
"These findings are consistent with other studies
reporting personality changes in Alzheimer's disease," they said. "In
the absence of autopsy confirmation, however, it is impossible to know
how many individuals in these prior studies of Alzheimer's disease personality
traits had concurrent Lewy bodies."
The authors noted that the study was limited by
the "coarse and non-quantifiable" ratings on the Blessed Dementia
scale, and the lack of information from informants about the degree of
change in an individual patient.
In addition, they acknowledged, the sample was not
population based and participation was voluntary, which could introduce
selection bias.
The study was supported by grants from the National
Institute on Aging, the American Federation for Aging Research, and the
Alan A. and Edith L. Wolff Charitable Trust. The authors had no financial
disclosures.
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Primary source: Neurology
Source reference:
Galvin JE et al. "Personality traits distinguishing dementia with
Lewy bodies from Alzheimer disease." Neurology 2007;68;1895-1901.
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