Articles

The Course of Psychopathologic Features in Mild to Moderate Alzheimer Disease

Devanand, DP; Jacobs, DM; Tang, Ming-Xin; Del, Castillo-Castaneda, C; Sano, M; Marder, K; Bell, K; Bylsma, FW; Brandt, J; Albert, M; Stern, Yaakov

Background: The onset and course of the psychopathologic features of Alzheimer disease have not been established in prospective, longitudinal studies.

Methods: Two hundred thirty-five patients with early, probable Alzheimer disease were recruited at 3 sites and observed naturalistically for up to 5 years. At 6-month intervals, the Columbia University Scale for Psychopathology in Alzheimer's Disease was administered. Markov analyses were used to predict the probability of a specific symptom developing or being maintained at the next visit. For each symptom category, the maximum frequency of occurrence at 4 consecutive points (duration, 2 years) was calculated.

Results: Misidentification, wandering or agitation, and physical aggression increased during follow-up. At any visit, the likelihood of a new symptom developing was greatest for behavioral disturbance, intermediate for paranoid delusions and hallucinations, and least for depressed mood with vegetative features. Wandering or agitation occurred at 3 or more of 4 consecutive visits (duration, 2 years) in the majority of patients, paranoid delusions and hallucinations were intermediate in their degree of persistence, and depressed mood with vegetative signs rarely persisted.

Conclusions: Behavioral disturbance, particularly agitation, is common and persistent in patients with Alzheimer disease. Psychotic symptoms are less common and show moderate persistence over time. Depressed mood with vegetative signs is uncommon and rarely persists. These findings suggest leads about the optimal treatment duration for specific subtypes of psychopathologic features.

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Also Published In

Title
Archives of General Psychiatry
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1001/archpsyc.1997.01830150083012

More About This Work

Academic Units
Neurology
Published Here
February 11, 2022