Diagnostic criteria for mild cognitive impairment in Parkinson's disease: <i>Movement</i> Disorder Society Task Force guidelines

Irene Litvan(University of Louisville), Jennifer G. Goldman(Rush University Medical Center), Alexander I. Tröster(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Ben Schmand(Amsterdam UMC Location University of Amsterdam), Daniel Weintraub(Mental Illness Research, Education and Clinical Centers), Ronald C. Petersen(Mayo Clinic in Florida), Brit Mollenhauer(Paracelsus Elena Klinik Kassel), Charles H. Adler(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Karen Marder(NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital), Caroline H. Williams‐Gray(University of Cambridge), Dag Aarsland(Karolinska University Hospital), Jaime Kulisevsky(Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona), María Rodríguez‐Oroz(Ikerbasque), David J. Burn(Newcastle University), Roger A. Barker(University of Cambridge), Murat Emre(Istanbul University)
Movement Disorders
January 24, 2012
Cited by 2,523Open Access
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Abstract

Mild cognitive impairment is common in nondemented Parkinson's disease (PD) patients and may be a harbinger of dementia. In view of its importance, the Movement Disorder Society commissioned a task force to delineate diagnostic criteria for mild cognitive impairment in PD. The proposed diagnostic criteria are based on a literature review and expert consensus. This article provides guidelines to characterize the clinical syndrome and methods for its diagnosis. The criteria will require validation, and possibly refinement, as additional research improves our understanding of the epidemiology, presentation, neurobiology, assessment, and long-term course of this clinical syndrome. These diagnostic criteria will support future research efforts to identify at the earliest stage those PD patients at increased risk of progressive cognitive decline and dementia who may benefit from clinical interventions at a predementia stage.


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