Biomarkers sensitive to functional impairment, neuronal loss, tau, and amyloid pathology based on MR, PET, and CSF studies are increasingly used to diagnose Alzheimer's disease (AD), but clinical validation is incomplete, hampering reimbursement by payers, widespread clinical implementation, and impacting on health care quality. An expert group convened to develop a strategic research agenda to foster the clinical validation of AD biomarkers. These demonstrated sufficient evidence of analytical validity (phase I of a structured framework adapted from oncology). Research priorities were identified based on incomplete clinical validity (phases II and III), and clinical utility (phases IV and V). Priorities included: definition of the assays; reading procedures and thresholds for normality; performance in detecting early disease; accounting for the effect of covariates; diagnostic algorithms comprising combinations of biomarkers; and developing best practice guidelines for the use of biomarkers in qualified memory clinics in the context of phase IV studies. 5 GlossaryBiomarker. An objective measure of a biological or pathogenic process with the purpose of evaluating disease risk or prognosis, guiding clinical diagnosis or monitoring therapeutic interventions. While the term originally referred to traceable substances produced by or introduced into an organism, it later evolved to any measurable parameter, including those obtained via imaging procedures.Roadmap. Objective-oriented, structured, and efficient action plan. In science and technology also called "strategic research agenda".Alzheimer's disease (AD) dementia. Traditionally and according to the National Institute of Neurological and Communicative Disorders and Stroke and the Alzheimer's Disease and Related Disorders Association (NINCDS-ADRDA) criteria, Alzheimer's disease was defined as a syndrome with progressive cognitive impairment severe enough to impact on daily activities. A diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease could only be made after exclusion of other possible causes. 1 Sixty-five to 80% of cases of patients fulfilling these criteria have Alzheimer's pathology (plaques and tangles), the remainder having a range of other pathologies. In order to increase diagnostic certainty, contemporary criteria for AD dementia incorporate biomarker evidence for different aspects of Alzheimer's pathology, including imaging (magnetic resonance imaging -MRI -measures of atrophy; 18 F-fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography -FDG-PET -measures of cerebral hypometabolism; amyloid PET measures of fibrillar β-amyloid -A -deposition) and cerebrospinal fluid -CSF (decreased levels of A42, increased levels of tau and phospho-tau). 2,3 Alzheimer's disease process. Recognizing that AD pathology is present many years before symptoms emerge, new criteria classify the disease process on a continuum from asymptomatic to prodromal and finally to dementia stage. 4 Individuals at the asymptomatic stage can only be identified by biomarkers of Alzheimer's pathology. None...
As a more complete picture of the clinical phenotype of Parkinson's disease emerges, non-motor symptoms have become increasingly studied. Prominent among these non-motor phenomena are mood disturbance, cognitive decline and dementia, sleep disorders, hyposmia and autonomic failure. In addition, visual symptoms are common, ranging from complaints of dry eyes and reading difficulties, through to perceptual disturbances (feelings of presence and passage) and complex visual hallucinations. Such visual symptoms are a considerable cause of morbidity in Parkinson's disease and, with respect to visual hallucinations, are an important predictor of cognitive decline as well as institutional care and mortality. Evidence exists of visual dysfunction at several levels of the visual pathway in Parkinson's disease. This includes psychophysical, electrophysiological and morphological evidence of disruption of retinal structure and function, in addition to disorders of 'higher' (cortical) visual processing. In this review, we will draw together work from animal and human studies in an attempt to provide an insight into how Parkinson's disease affects the retina and how these changes might contribute to the visual symptoms experienced by patients.
Much of the research on visual hallucinations (VHs) has been conducted in the context of eye disease and neurodegenerative conditions, but little is known about these phenomena in psychiatric and nonclinical populations. The purpose of this article is to bring together current knowledge regarding VHs in the psychosis phenotype and contrast this data with the literature drawn from neurodegenerative disorders and eye disease. The evidence challenges the traditional views that VHs are atypical or uncommon in psychosis. The weighted mean for VHs is 27% in schizophrenia, 15% in affective psychosis, and 7.3% in the general community. VHs are linked to a more severe psychopathological profile and less favorable outcome in psychosis and neurodegenerative conditions. VHs typically co-occur with auditory hallucinations, suggesting a common etiological cause. VHs in psychosis are also remarkably complex, negative in content, and are interpreted to have personal relevance. The cognitive mechanisms of VHs in psychosis have rarely been investigated, but existing studies point to source-monitoring deficits and distortions in top-down mechanisms, although evidence for visual processing deficits, which feature strongly in the organic literature, is lacking. Brain imaging studies point to the activation of visual cortex during hallucinations on a background of structural and connectivity changes within wider brain networks. The relationship between VHs in psychosis, eye disease, and neurodegeneration remains unclear, although the pattern of similarities and differences described in this review suggests that comparative studies may have potentially important clinical and theoretical implications.
Abstract-Objective:To quantify visual discrimination, space-motion, and object-form perception in patients with Parkinson disease dementia (PDD), dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB), and Alzheimer disease (AD). Methods: The authors used a cross-sectional study to compare three demented groups matched for overall dementia severity (PDD: n ϭ 24; DLB: n ϭ 20; AD: n ϭ 23) and two age-, sex-, and education-matched control groups (PD: n ϭ 24, normal controls [NC]: n ϭ 25). Results: Visual perception was globally more impaired in PDD than in nondemented controls (NC, PD), but was not different from DLB. Compared to AD, PDD patients tended to perform worse in all perceptual scores. Visual perception of patients with PDD/DLB and visual hallucinations was significantly worse than in patients without hallucinations. Conclusions: Parkinson disease dementia (PDD) is associated with profound visuoperceptual impairments similar to dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) but different from Alzheimer disease. These findings are consistent with previous neuroimaging studies reporting hypoactivity in cortical areas involved in visual processing in PDD and DLB. NEUROLOGY 2004;63:2091-2096 Parkinson disease (PD) is associated with a higher risk of developing dementia compared to healthy elderly controls; longitudinal studies suggest that up to 78% of PD patients will develop dementia after nearly two decades of motor symptoms.1 Once dementia is established, clinical symptoms of PD dementia (PDD) may show, apart from a longer duration of motor features, considerable overlap with dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB). The postural instability-gait type of parkinsonism is overrepresented in PDD and DLB 2 and both disorders show similar fluctuation of attention 3 and response to cholinergic therapy. 4,5 Studies comparing visual perception and visual construction of PDD with Alzheimer disease (AD) have revealed contradictory results. Some studies report PDD to be more impaired, 6,7 whereas other studies found no differences. 8,9 Similar inconsistencies have been found when perception of PD patients was compared with healthy controls.10 Since operationalized criteria to define the clinical boundaries between PD and PDD or PDD and DLB require refinement, these inconsistencies may be partly due to diagnostic heterogeneity. When DLB was compared with AD, studies consistently reported greater visual impairment in DLB 11 and a recent study found similar impairments in pentagon copying in DLB and PDD.12 Some of these studies used construction tasks as evidence, but this may not be legitimate given the motor impairments in these patients. Studies quantifying visual perception of DLB and PDD using tasks without motor requirements are lacking.Peripheral structures such as the retina, the optic nerve and tract, and primary visual cortex are multimodal in their function, whereas the visual association cortex is more specialized.13 Low-level visual discrimination is mainly processed in visual area V1/ V2, whereas high-level visual functions require additional activati...
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