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Query: UMLS:C0233794 (
memory impairment
)
7,237
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sixty-four patients with advanced
multiple sclerosis
were assessed on intellectual and memory tests. They were rated by occupational therapists on an Activities of Daily Living scale according to their abilities, and by relatives on the same scale, according to what they actually did. Results indicated that the
multiple sclerosis
patients had intellectual and memory deficits. A few discrepancies occurred between patients' abilities as rated by an occupational therapist and what they actually did as rated by a relative. These discrepancies were not significantly related to
memory impairment
.
...
PMID:Intellectual impairment in multiple sclerosis and its relation to functional abilities. 49 2
We examined the relationship between
memory impairment
and functional disability in
multiple sclerosis
. Tests of memory, sensorimotor ability, and functional capacity were administered to fifty-six subjects with chronic-progressive or remitting-relapsing MS. Sensorimotor impairment, functional disability, and chronicity predicted impairment on various measures of memory acquisition, while age and type of diagnosis did not. After accounting for the effects of initial acquisition, delayed-recall performance was weakly-associated with disability. We suggest that: (1) Functional disability is associated with memory loss in MS; (2) MS-forgetting is caused by defective acquisition, rather by a deficit in consolidation or storage; (3) Level of disease activity, rather than type of MS diagnosis, determines the degree of
memory impairment
; and (4) MS disability needs to be evaluated multidimensionally, to account for both neurologic and functional impairment.
...
PMID:The relationship between disability and memory dysfunction in multiple sclerosis. 134 11
A one in two alternate sample (N = 200) from a population-based register of 411 people with
multiple sclerosis
(MS) was studied. Out of this sample, 147 people with MS and 34 people with rheumatoid arthritis were interviewed at home and completed a battery of neuropsychological tests. Cognitive impairment was found in 46 per cent of those with MS, with
memory impairment
in 34 per cent and failure on tests of frontal lobe function in 33 per cent. Physical disability was associated with cognitive impairment.
Memory impairment
was more common in those who had had MS for 10 years or more. A significant minority of people with mild physical disability and some who had had MS for less than a decade nevertheless had cognitive impairment. Relationships between cognitive impairment, other disease variables and psychosocial factors were examined. Counselling and rehabilitation programmes for people with MS and their families should take account of cognitive deficits that may be present.
...
PMID:The prevalence of cognitive impairment in a community survey of multiple sclerosis. 177 55
To better understand the nature of the memory deficit in patients with
multiple sclerosis
, we designed a study to compare automatic vs effortful memory processes. Forty-one patients with definite
multiple sclerosis
and 45 demographically matched normal control subjects were administered two tasks designed to assess both automatic (monitoring frequency and modality) and effortful (free and cued-recall) processing. Results indicated that patients with
multiple sclerosis
, as expected, were significantly impaired on memory measures requiring effort, but performed normally on automatic measures. Performance on the memory indexes did not correlate with self-reported depression. The implications of these findings for delineating the locus of the
memory impairment
in
multiple sclerosis
is discussed.
...
PMID:Automatic memory processes in patients with multiple sclerosis. 192
We compared the performance of 50
multiple sclerosis
(MS) patients and 35 normal controls on a variety of memory tasks to determine the nature and severity of memory deficits in the MS patients and the proportion of patients affected. We also determined the relationship between memory and other cognitive functions, demographic factors, disease characteristics, depression, and psychoactive medication. We found significant differences between patients and controls on almost all memory tests. Patterns of learning, effects of interference, and improvement with cuing were similar for both groups. Thirty percent of patients showed severe
memory impairment
, 30% were moderately impaired, and 40% were mildly or not impaired.
Memory dysfunction
was related to impairment of other cognitive functions, lower socioeconomic status, chronic progressive type of MS, and use of antianxiety medication, but not to severity of disability, duration of MS symptoms or depression.
...
PMID:Memory impairment in multiple sclerosis. 221 78
Deficits in semantic encoding have been described in patients with frontal lobe disease who also show memory impairments. As a group, patients with
multiple sclerosis
(MS) exhibit
memory impairment
, fail to make effective use of semantic encoding to aid memory, and perform poorly on verbal fluency and concept formation tests which are sensitive to frontal lobe damage. In the present study the semantic encoding capacity of MS patients was measured using a modification of Wicken's release from proactive interference (PI) paradigm. Individual patients varied considerably in the severity of their impairments on verbal fluency, verbal recognition memory and on Wisconsin Card Sorting Task, but even patients who evidenced both
memory impairment
and signs of frontal lobe dysfunction showed normal release from PI after a categorical shift. Memory disturbances in MS are unlikely to result from an incapacity for semantic encoding, which seems preserved in MS, but may arise instead from deficits in processing information rapidly.
...
PMID:Frontal lobe dysfunction and memory impairment in patients with chronic progressive multiple sclerosis. 278 18
Thirty-seven patients with
multiple sclerosis
(MS) were compared to 26 normal controls of equivalent age, education, and verbal intelligence on measures of verbal learning and memory (Digit Span and Supraspan, Brown-Peterson Distractor Task, Selective Reminding Test, Story Recall, and Free Verbal Recall) and verbal fluency (Letter and Animal Fluency). The MS patients exhibited deficits on measures of secondary (long-term) memory and verbal fluency, but performed normally on measures of primary (short-term) memory, recognition memory, and rate of forgetting from secondary memory. These results suggest that the memory disturbance in MS results primarily from an imparied ability to access information from secondary memory, while encoding and storage capacity is intact. Degree of
memory impairment
was unrelated to length of illness, severity of disability, or self-reported depression.
...
PMID:On the nature of memory disturbance in multiple sclerosis. 280 59
Sixteen patients with a definitive diagnosis of
multiple sclerosis
(MS) and an equal number of matched controls were administered tests of memory and information processing speed. Results indicated a significant long-term verbal
memory impairment
in patients with MS, with spared short-term memory and memory scanning. Speed of information processing was evaluated with the Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test. The results for the two highest rates of presentation revealed significantly impaired processing in the MS group. Performance at the higher rates and retrieval of information from long-term memory were significantly correlated. These results suggest that slowed information processing is a deficit that contributes to long-term
memory impairment
in patients with MS.
...
PMID:Slowed information processing in multiple sclerosis. 334 52
A number of different instruments have been devised for investigating individual differences in memory on the basis of subjective reports. One such questionnaire was mailed to individuals on a register of patients with
multiple sclerosis
, a condition that is known to be associated with objective impairments in cognition and memory. A similar questionnaire was enclosed to be completed about each patient by a close relative. The patients' and relatives' responses were found to share a factor structure identifying memory problems in five areas: receptive communication, route finding, absent-mindedness, face recognition, and expressive communication. These were dominated by a single second-order factor representing a global subjective
memory impairment
. There were some minor differences between the patients and relatives in their factor scores, but there was generally a high degree of concordance in their responses.
...
PMID:The constituent structure of subjective memory questionnaires: evidence from multiple sclerosis. 779 4
The present study was designed to examine whether verbal
memory impairment
in
multiple sclerosis
(MS) is attributable to impaired information acquisition or compromised retrieval. Twenty-three MS and 23 control subjects were administered a 10-item verbal list-learning task. Subjects were trained to a specific criterion on the verbal test in order to assure equal information acquisition. Following a 30-min delay, retrieval and recognition performance was evaluated. MS subjects required significantly more trials to reach criterion on the task relative to controls, but the groups did not differ on tests of recall and recognition. Performance was correlated with rate of information processing speed. These results suggest that verbal
memory impairment
among MS subjects is a consequence of inadequate initial learning and not a function of impaired retrieval.
...
PMID:The nature of memory impairments in multiple sclerosis: acquisition versus retrieval. 802 5
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