2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2019.03.002
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The difference of mild cognitive impairment in Parkinson's disease from amnestic mild cognitive impairment: Deeper power decrement and no phase-locking in visual event-related responses

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Cited by 17 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…Notably, these effects were not demonstrated at the individual level. Furthermore, they may be disease unspecific as similar abnormalities were observed in PDMCI (Güntekin et al, 2020;Yener et al, 2019), PDD (Güntekin et al, 2020), LBD (Rosenblum et al, 2020), and major VCI patients (Lou et al, 2011;Wang et al, 2016;Xu et al, 2011Xu et al, , 2015. Keeping the above data in mind, the present Expert Panel recommends that eventrelated delta and theta power during oddball tasks may be used in future clinical trials carried out in ADMCI and ADD patients for analyses at the group level.…”
Section: Recommendationsmentioning
confidence: 90%
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“…Notably, these effects were not demonstrated at the individual level. Furthermore, they may be disease unspecific as similar abnormalities were observed in PDMCI (Güntekin et al, 2020;Yener et al, 2019), PDD (Güntekin et al, 2020), LBD (Rosenblum et al, 2020), and major VCI patients (Lou et al, 2011;Wang et al, 2016;Xu et al, 2011Xu et al, , 2015. Keeping the above data in mind, the present Expert Panel recommends that eventrelated delta and theta power during oddball tasks may be used in future clinical trials carried out in ADMCI and ADD patients for analyses at the group level.…”
Section: Recommendationsmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…visual oddball task was lower in both ADMCI and PDMCI patients compared to CU adults. Furthermore, theta phaselocking was lower in PDMCI but not ADMCI patients when compared to controls (Yener et al, 2019). Rosenblum et al (2020) showed that event-related theta power and phase-locking during a visual (but not auditory) oddball task was lower in LBD patients than in CU participants.…”
Section: Admci and Add Patientsmentioning
confidence: 96%
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“…Whereas upper alpha power decreased (ERD) for cognitively healthy older adults, it increased (ERS) for people with aMCI. On the other hand, Sharma et al [74], (n = 15 dementia, 16 MCI, 13 OA), Kurt et al [122], (n = 22 aMCI, 21 OA), and Yener et al [123], (n = 18 aMCI, 18 OA); [124], (n = 30 aMCI, 28 OA) did not find significant differences between people with MCI and cognitively healthy older adults during tasks of attention. Sharma et al [74] did find a difference between people with MCI and people with dementia, but the direction of the difference was unclear, and dementia and MCI were not diagnosed according to widely accepted criteria.…”
Section: Alpha Power and Functional Connectivity During Task Performamentioning
confidence: 87%