Anosognosia in Alzheimer's Pathology: Validation of a New Measure
CONCLUSIONS: These studies establish an efficient measure of insight with high clinical utility and inform the literature on the role of insight in predicting performance in those with Alzheimer's pathology.PMID:38469927 | DOI:10.1093/arclin/acae020 (Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology)
Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology - March 12, 2024 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Christian Terry Len Lecci Source Type: research

Anosognosia in Alzheimer's Pathology: Validation of a New Measure
CONCLUSIONS: These studies establish an efficient measure of insight with high clinical utility and inform the literature on the role of insight in predicting performance in those with Alzheimer's pathology.PMID:38469927 | DOI:10.1093/arclin/acae020 (Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology)
Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology - March 12, 2024 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Christian Terry Len Lecci Source Type: research

Anosognosia in Alzheimer's Pathology: Validation of a New Measure
CONCLUSIONS: These studies establish an efficient measure of insight with high clinical utility and inform the literature on the role of insight in predicting performance in those with Alzheimer's pathology.PMID:38469927 | DOI:10.1093/arclin/acae020 (Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology)
Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology - March 12, 2024 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Christian Terry Len Lecci Source Type: research

Adaptation and validation of the Greek version of the Communication and Language Assessment questionnaire for persons with Multiple Sclerosis (CLAMS)
CONCLUSION: The Greek version of the CLAMS is a valid self-reported questionnaire for the evaluation of language and communication symptoms in PwMS.PMID:38462980 | DOI:10.1093/arclin/acae015 (Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology)
Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology - March 11, 2024 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Nefeli Dimitriou Grigorios Nasios Anastasia Nousia Emmanouil Anyfantis Lambros Messinis Georgios Dimakopoulos Sarah El-Wahsh Christos Bakirtzis Vasiliki Kostadima Spiridon Konitsiotis Source Type: research

BDNF Val66Met moderates episodic memory decline and tau biomarker increases in early sporadic Alzheimer's disease
CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that reduced neurotrophic support, which is associated with Met66 carriage, may increase vulnerability to Aβ-related tau hyperphosphorylation, neuronal dysfunction, and cognitive decline even prior to the emergence of dementia. Additionally, these findings highlight the need for neuropsychological and clinicopathological models of AD to account for neurotrophic factors and the genes which moderate their expression.PMID:38454193 | DOI:10.1093/arclin/acae014 (Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology)
Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology - March 7, 2024 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Diny Thomson Emily Rosenich Paul Maruff Yen Ying Lim Alzheimer ’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative Source Type: research

BDNF Val66Met moderates episodic memory decline and tau biomarker increases in early sporadic Alzheimer's disease
CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that reduced neurotrophic support, which is associated with Met66 carriage, may increase vulnerability to Aβ-related tau hyperphosphorylation, neuronal dysfunction, and cognitive decline even prior to the emergence of dementia. Additionally, these findings highlight the need for neuropsychological and clinicopathological models of AD to account for neurotrophic factors and the genes which moderate their expression.PMID:38454193 | DOI:10.1093/arclin/acae014 (Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology)
Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology - March 7, 2024 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Diny Thomson Emily Rosenich Paul Maruff Yen Ying Lim Alzheimer ’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative Source Type: research

BDNF Val66Met moderates episodic memory decline and tau biomarker increases in early sporadic Alzheimer's disease
CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that reduced neurotrophic support, which is associated with Met66 carriage, may increase vulnerability to Aβ-related tau hyperphosphorylation, neuronal dysfunction, and cognitive decline even prior to the emergence of dementia. Additionally, these findings highlight the need for neuropsychological and clinicopathological models of AD to account for neurotrophic factors and the genes which moderate their expression.PMID:38454193 | DOI:10.1093/arclin/acae014 (Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology)
Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology - March 7, 2024 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Diny Thomson Emily Rosenich Paul Maruff Yen Ying Lim Alzheimer ’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative Source Type: research

BDNF Val66Met moderates episodic memory decline and tau biomarker increases in early sporadic Alzheimer's disease
CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that reduced neurotrophic support, which is associated with Met66 carriage, may increase vulnerability to Aβ-related tau hyperphosphorylation, neuronal dysfunction, and cognitive decline even prior to the emergence of dementia. Additionally, these findings highlight the need for neuropsychological and clinicopathological models of AD to account for neurotrophic factors and the genes which moderate their expression.PMID:38454193 | DOI:10.1093/arclin/acae014 (Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology)
Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology - March 7, 2024 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Diny Thomson Emily Rosenich Paul Maruff Yen Ying Lim Alzheimer ’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative Source Type: research

The Montreal Cognitive Assessment: Norms and Reliable Change Indices for Standard and MoCA-22 Administrations
CONCLUSIONS: MoCA total scores are adequately reproducible among those with cognitive diagnoses, but domain scores are unstable. Robust regression-based norms should be used to adjust for demographic performance differences, and the limited reliability, along with the ceiling effects and negative skew, should be considered when interpreting MoCA scores.PMID:38441951 | DOI:10.1093/arclin/acae013 (Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology)
Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology - March 5, 2024 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Lauren N Ratcliffe Andrew C Hale Taylor McDonald Kelsey C Hewitt Christopher M Nguyen Robert J Spencer David W Loring Source Type: research

The Montreal Cognitive Assessment: Norms and Reliable Change Indices for Standard and MoCA-22 Administrations
CONCLUSIONS: MoCA total scores are adequately reproducible among those with cognitive diagnoses, but domain scores are unstable. Robust regression-based norms should be used to adjust for demographic performance differences, and the limited reliability, along with the ceiling effects and negative skew, should be considered when interpreting MoCA scores.PMID:38441951 | DOI:10.1093/arclin/acae013 (Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology)
Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology - March 5, 2024 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Lauren N Ratcliffe Andrew C Hale Taylor McDonald Kelsey C Hewitt Christopher M Nguyen Robert J Spencer David W Loring Source Type: research

Development and Validation of a Vocabulary Measure in the Mobile Toolbox
CONCLUSION: The MTB Word Meaning measure demonstrated evidence of reliability and validity in three samples. Further validation studies in clinical samples are necessary.PMID:38414411 | DOI:10.1093/arclin/acae010 (Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology)
Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology - February 28, 2024 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Stephanie Ruth Young Elizabeth M Dworak Aaron J Kaat Hubert Adam Miriam A Novack Jerry Slotkin Jordan Stoeger Cindy J Nowinski Zahra Hosseinian Saki Amagai Sarah Pila Maria Varela Diaz Anyelo Almonte Correa Keith Alperin Larsson Omberg Michael Kellen Moni Source Type: research

Development and Validation of a Vocabulary Measure in the Mobile Toolbox
CONCLUSION: The MTB Word Meaning measure demonstrated evidence of reliability and validity in three samples. Further validation studies in clinical samples are necessary.PMID:38414411 | DOI:10.1093/arclin/acae010 (Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology)
Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology - February 28, 2024 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Stephanie Ruth Young Elizabeth M Dworak Aaron J Kaat Hubert Adam Miriam A Novack Jerry Slotkin Jordan Stoeger Cindy J Nowinski Zahra Hosseinian Saki Amagai Sarah Pila Maria Varela Diaz Anyelo Almonte Correa Keith Alperin Larsson Omberg Michael Kellen Moni Source Type: research

Development and Validation of a Vocabulary Measure in the Mobile Toolbox
CONCLUSION: The MTB Word Meaning measure demonstrated evidence of reliability and validity in three samples. Further validation studies in clinical samples are necessary.PMID:38414411 | DOI:10.1093/arclin/acae010 (Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology)
Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology - February 28, 2024 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Stephanie Ruth Young Elizabeth M Dworak Aaron J Kaat Hubert Adam Miriam A Novack Jerry Slotkin Jordan Stoeger Cindy J Nowinski Zahra Hosseinian Saki Amagai Sarah Pila Maria Varela Diaz Anyelo Almonte Correa Keith Alperin Larsson Omberg Michael Kellen Moni Source Type: research

Development and Validation of a Vocabulary Measure in the Mobile Toolbox
CONCLUSION: The MTB Word Meaning measure demonstrated evidence of reliability and validity in three samples. Further validation studies in clinical samples are necessary.PMID:38414411 | DOI:10.1093/arclin/acae010 (Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology)
Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology - February 28, 2024 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Stephanie Ruth Young Elizabeth M Dworak Aaron J Kaat Hubert Adam Miriam A Novack Jerry Slotkin Jordan Stoeger Cindy J Nowinski Zahra Hosseinian Saki Amagai Sarah Pila Maria Varela Diaz Anyelo Almonte Correa Keith Alperin Larsson Omberg Michael Kellen Moni Source Type: research

Development and Validation of a Vocabulary Measure in the Mobile Toolbox
CONCLUSION: The MTB Word Meaning measure demonstrated evidence of reliability and validity in three samples. Further validation studies in clinical samples are necessary.PMID:38414411 | DOI:10.1093/arclin/acae010 (Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology)
Source: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology - February 28, 2024 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Stephanie Ruth Young Elizabeth M Dworak Aaron J Kaat Hubert Adam Miriam A Novack Jerry Slotkin Jordan Stoeger Cindy J Nowinski Zahra Hosseinian Saki Amagai Sarah Pila Maria Varela Diaz Anyelo Almonte Correa Keith Alperin Larsson Omberg Michael Kellen Moni Source Type: research