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BukuNeuropsychological deficits associated with driving performance in Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s disease (in Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society 11)
Bibliografi
Author: Grace, Janet ; Amick, Melissa M. ; D’Abreu, Anelyssa ; Festa, Elena K. ; Heindel, William C. ; Ott, Brian R.
Topik: Dementia; Motor vehicles; Cognition; Memory; Neurodegenerative Diseases; Basal Ganglia
Bahasa: (EN )    
Penerbit: Cambridge University Press     Tempat Terbit: New York    Tahun Terbit: 2005    
Jenis: Article - diterbitkan di jurnal ilmiah internasional
Fulltext: neuropsychological deficits associated with driving.pdf (100.42KB; 2 download)
Abstract
Neuropsychological and motor deficits in
Parkinson’s disease that may contribute to driving impairment were examined in a cohort study comparing patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD) to patients with Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and to healthy elderly controls. Nondemented individuals with Parkinson’s disease [Hoehn & Yahr (H&Y) stage I–III], patients with Alzheimer’s disease [Clinical Demetia Rating scale (CDR) range 0–1], and elderly controls, who were actively driving, completed a neuropsychological battery and a standardized road test administered by a professional driving instructor. On-road driving ability was rated on number of driving errors and a global rating of safe, marginal, or unsafe. Overall, Alzheimer’s patients were more impaired drivers than Parkinson’s patients. Parkinson’s patients distinguished themselves from other drivers by a head-turning deficiency. Drivers with Neuropsychological impairment were more likely to be unsafe drivers in both disease groups compared to controls. Compared to controls, unsafe drivers with Alzheimer’s disease were impaired across all neuropsychological measures except finger tapping. Driving performance in Parkinson’s patients was related to disease severity (H&Y), neuropsychological measures [Rey Osterreith Complex Figure (ROCF), Trails B, Hopkins Verbal List Learning Test (HVLT)-delay], and specific motor symptoms (axial rigidity, postural instability), but not to the Unified Parkinson Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) motor score. Multifactorial measures (ROCF, Trails B) were useful in distinguishing safe from unsafe drivers in both patient groups
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