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      The cognitive profile of prion disease: a prospective clinical and imaging study

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          Abstract

          Objectives

          Prion diseases are dementing illnesses with poorly defined neuropsychological features. This is probably because the most common form, sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, is often rapidly progressive with pervasive cognitive decline making detailed neuropsychological investigation difficult. This study, which includes patients with inherited, acquired (iatrogenic and variant) and sporadic forms of the disease, is the only large-scale neuropsychological investigation of this patient group ever undertaken and aimed to define a neuropsychological profile of human prion diseases.

          Methods

          A tailored short cognitive examination of all of the patients ( n = 81), with detailed neuropsychological testing in a subset with mild disease ( n = 30) and correlation with demographic, clinical, genetic ( PRNP mutation and polymorphic codon 129 genotype), and other variables (MRI brain signal change in cortex, basal ganglia or thalamus; quantitative research imaging, cerebrospinal fluid 14-3-3 protein).

          Results

          Comparison with healthy controls showed patients to be impaired on all tasks. Principal components analysis showed a major axis of fronto-parietal dysfunction that accounted for approximately half of the variance observed. This correlated strongly with volume reduction in frontal and parietal gray matter on MRI. Examination of individual patients' performances confirmed early impairment on this axis, suggesting characteristic cognitive features in mild disease: prominent executive impairment, parietal dysfunction, a largely expressive dysphasia, with reduced motor speed.

          Interpretation

          Taken together with typical neurological features, these results complete a profile that should improve differential diagnosis in a clinical setting. We propose a tailored neuropsychological battery for early recognition of clinical onset of symptoms with potential for use in clinical trials involving at-risk individuals.

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          Most cited references47

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          A modified card sorting test sensitive to frontal lobe defects.

          H Nelson (1976)
          Milner's (1963) report of impaired performance on the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST) in a group of patients with frontal lobe lesions suggested that this test might be a useful one in the investigation of individual patients with suspected brain lesions. However, for many of our older hospital population the WCST was found to be too difficult and distressing, and also the inherent ambiguities associated with certain responses limited the test's usefulness for research purposes. Therefore, a simpler and less ambiguous modification was devised (MCS) and a new method of measuring perseverative errors proposed. In a group of 53 patients with unilateral cerebral lesions, those with frontal lobe lesions performed less well with the MCST and made a higher proportion of perseverative errors than those with lesions elsewhere: there were no laterality effects in either frontal or non-frontal groups. The usefulness of the MCST for detecting frontal lobe lesions in individual patients was established, and the use of cut-off scores briefly discussed.
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            The Children's Test of Nonword Repetition: a test of phonological working memory.

            This article presents findings from the Children's Test of Nonword Repetition (CNRep). Normative data based on its administration to over 600 children aged between four and nine years are reported. Close developmental links are established between CNRep scores and vocabulary, reading, and comprehensive skills in children during the early school years. The links between nonword repetition and language skills are shown to be consistently higher and more specific than those obtained between language skills and another simple verbal task with a significant phonological memory component, auditory digit span. The psychological mechanisms underpinning these distinctive developmental relationships between nonword repetition and language development are considered.
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              Iatrogenic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease at the millennium.

              The causes and geographic distribution of 267 cases of iatrogenic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) are here updated at the millennium. Small numbers of still-occurring cases result from disease onsets after longer and longer incubation periods following infection by cadaveric human growth hormone or dura mater grafts manufactured and distributed before the mid-1980s. The proportion of recipients acquiring CJD from growth hormone varies from 0.3 to 4.4% in different countries, and acquisition from dura mater varies between 0.02 and 0.05% in Japan (where most cases occurred). Incubation periods can extend up to 30 years, and cerebellar onsets predominate in both hormone and graft recipients (in whom the site of graft placement had no effect on the clinical presentation). Homozygosity at codon 129 of the PRNP gene is over-represented in both forms of disease; it has no effect on the incubation period of graft recipients, but may promote shorter incubation periods in hormone cases. Knowledge about potential high-risk sources of contamination gained during the last quarter century, and the implementation of methods to circumvent them, should minimize the potential for iatrogenic contributions to the current spectrum of CJD.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Ann Clin Transl Neurol
                Ann Clin Transl Neurol
                acn3
                Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology
                BlackWell Publishing Ltd (Oxford, UK )
                2328-9503
                2328-9503
                May 2015
                07 April 2015
                : 2
                : 5
                : 548-558
                Affiliations
                [1 ]NHS National Prion Clinic, National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery (NHNN), University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust London, United Kingdom
                [2 ]Department of Neuropsychology, NHNN, University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust London, United Kingdom
                [3 ]Department of Neurodegenerative Disease, UCL Institute of Neurology London, United Kingdom
                [4 ]Academic Neuroradiological Unit, Department of Brain Repair and Rehabilitation, UCL Institute of Neurology London, United Kingdom
                [5 ]Lysholm Department of Neuroradiology, NHNN, University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust London, United Kingdom
                [6 ]MRC Prion Unit, Department of Neurodegenerative Disease, UCL Institute of Neurology London, United Kingdom
                Author notes
                Correspondence Simon Mead, MRC Prion Unit and NHS National Prion Clinic, National Hospital for Neurology & Neurosurgery, University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, London WC1N 3BG, United Kingdom. Tel: 02076762164; Fax: 02034484046; E-mail: s.mead@ 123456prion.ucl.ac.uk

                Funding Information The Cohort study was funded by the Department of Health (England) and the UCLH/UCL Biomedical Research Centre with additional support from the Medical Research Council.

                Article
                10.1002/acn3.195
                4435708
                26000326
                fc8a76ee-d90b-4d1b-87b0-ab1a2690171e
                © 2015 The Authors. Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc on behalf of American Neurological Association.

                This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non-commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.

                History
                : 11 February 2015
                : 13 February 2015
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