Author/Authors :
Meguro, Kenichi Geriatric Behavioral Neurology Project - Tohoku University New Industry Hatchery Center (NICHe), Sendai, Japan , Takahashi, Yumi Geriatric Behavioral Neurology Project - Tohoku University New Industry Hatchery Center (NICHe), Sendai, Japan , Nakatsuka, Masahiro Geriatric Behavioral Neurology Project - Tohoku University New Industry Hatchery Center (NICHe), Sendai, Japan , Oonuma, Jiro Geriatric Behavioral Neurology Project - Tohoku University New Industry Hatchery Center (NICHe), Sendai, Japan , Kumai, Keiichi Geriatric Behavioral Neurology Project - Tohoku University New Industry Hatchery Center (NICHe), Sendai, Japan , Kasai, Mari Geriatric Behavioral Neurology Project - Tohoku University New Industry Hatchery Center (NICHe), Sendai, Japan , Yamaguchi, Satoshi Geriatric Behavioral Neurology Project - Tohoku University New Industry Hatchery Center (NICHe), Sendai, Japan
Abstract :
Objective. Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is characterized by a slow progressive impairment of episodic memory. Many studies have
shown that AD exhibits deterioration of semantic memory during the course of disease progression. We previously reported
that AD patients exhibited severe access disorders in the semantic memory system, using the Momentary Presentation
Task (20 or 300 ms). In this study, we studied access disorder in patients with AD by the use of object difference (pictures vs
words) methods. Methods. 56 patients with probable AD (NINCDS-ADRDA, mean age 79.0 years) and 11 healthy controls
(HC) (mean age 67.0 years) were studied. Ten pictures and 10 corresponding Japanese Hiragana words were presented
arbitrarily for 20 and 300 ms on the monitor screen which were correctly named at the usual confrontation setting
(i.e., semantic memory preserved). They were asked to name the pictures or to read the words or nonsense syllables aloud.
Results. The AD group showed significantly lower scores than the HC group, especially for the 20 ms condition. For the type of
stimuli, the AD patients had better performances for words > pictures > nonsense syllables, although no differences for the HC
group. The effect of AD severity was noted, moderate > severe stage. Conclusions. Our results suggested that the processing
speed in AD patients may have reduced, even if the semantic memory were preserved. These data indicated that the difference
in the processing speeds by the type of stimuli (pictures, words, and nonsense syllables) may be a character of AD patients.