Neuropsychiatric symptoms as early manifestations of emergent dementia: Provisional diagnostic criteria for mild behavioral impairment

Zahinoor Ismail(University of Calgary), Eric E. Smith(University of Calgary), Yonas E. Geda(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), David L. Sultzer(University of California, Los Angeles), Henry Brodaty(UNSW Sydney), Gwenn S. Smith(Johns Hopkins University), Luis Agüera-Ortíz(Instituto de Salud Carlos III), R. D. Sweet(University of Pittsburgh), David S. Miller, Constantine G. Lyketsos(Johns Hopkins University), ISTAART Neuropsychiatric Symptoms Professional Interest Area(University of Calgary)
Alzheimer s & Dementia
June 18, 2015
Cited by 833Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPS) are common in dementia and in predementia syndromes such as mild cognitive impairment (MCI). NPS in MCI confer a greater risk for conversion to dementia in comparison to MCI patients without NPS. NPS in older adults with normal cognition also confers a greater risk of cognitive decline in comparison to older adults without NPS. Mild behavioral impairment (MBI) has been proposed as a diagnostic construct aimed to identify patients with an increased risk of developing dementia, but who may or may not have cognitive symptoms. We propose criteria that include MCI in the MBI framework, in contrast to prior definitions of MBI. Although MBI and MCI can co-occur, we suggest that they are different and that both portend a higher risk of dementia. These MBI criteria extend the previous literature in this area and will serve as a template for validation of the MBI construct from epidemiologic, neurobiological, treatment, and prevention perspectives.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis