Clinical diagnostic criteria for dementia associated with Parkinson's disease

Murat Emre(Istanbul University), Dag Aarsland(Stavanger University Hospital), Richard G. Brown(King's College London), David J. Burn(Newcastle Hospitals - Campus for Ageing and Vitality), Charles Duyckaerts(Inserm), Y Mizuno(Juntendo University), G. Anthony Broe(UNSW Sydney), Jeffrey L. Cummings(University of California, Los Angeles), Dennis W. Dickson(Jacksonville College), Serge Gauthier(McGill University), Jennifer G. Goldman(Rush University Medical Center), Christopher G. Goetz(Rush University Medical Center), Amos D. Korczyn(Tel Aviv University), Andrew J. Lees(National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery), Richard Lévy(Inserm), Irene Litvan(University of Louisville), Ian G. McKeith(North Tyneside General Hospital), Warren Olanow(Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai), Werner Poewe(Innsbruck Medical University), Niall Quinn(Sobell House), Christina Sampaio(Instituto de Medicina Molecular João Lobo Antunes), Eduardo Tolosa(Hospital Clínic de Barcelona), Bruno Dubois(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1)
Movement Disorders
May 31, 2007
Cited by 3,025

Abstract

Dementia has been increasingly more recognized to be a common feature in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD), especially in old age. Specific criteria for the clinical diagnosis of dementia associated with PD (PD-D), however, have been lacking. A Task Force, organized by the Movement Disorder Study, was charged with the development of clinical diagnostic criteria for PD-D. The Task Force members were assigned to sub-committees and performed a systematic review of the literature, based on pre-defined selection criteria, in order to identify the epidemiological, clinical, auxillary, and pathological features of PD-D. Clinical diagnostic criteria were then developed based on these findings and group consensus. The incidence of dementia in PD is increased up to six times, point-prevelance is close to 30%, older age and akinetic-rigid form are associated with higher risk. PD-D is characterized by impairment in attention, memory, executive and visuo-spatial functions, behavioral symptoms such as affective changes, hallucinations, and apathy are frequent. There are no specific ancillary investigations for the diagnosis; the main pathological correlate is Lewy body-type degeneration in cerebral cortex and limbic structures. Based on the characteristic features associated with this condition, clinical diagnostic criteria for probable and possible PD-D are proposed.


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