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Eating Fish Can Keep Mental Decline at Bayd
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Eating Fish Can Keep Mental Decline
at Bay
HealthSCOUT
January 30, 2004
HealthNewsDigest.com - January 27, 2004 Washington
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When cognitive skills start fading,
how do we know when its time to stop driving?
Although there is some consensus that individuals
with moderate to severe dementia should not drive,
it has been much harder to screen people with mild
dementia, the earliest stage of the mental deterioration
typical of Alzheimers disease. Researchers in
Washington state recently reviewed all published reports
on the subject and determined that for these people,
specific tests of mental status and visuospatial skills
predict driving performance. Honing in on specific
aspects of an individuals neuropsychological
functioning could help clinicians and government agencies
develop the right tools to keep drivers - and everyone
else on the road - safe. The report appears in the
January issue of Neuropsychology, which is published
by the American Psychological Association (APA).
On-road and non-road (simulator) tests both proved
to be superior to caregiver reports in revealing significant
relationships between neuropsychological functioning
and driving ability.
"Evidence suggests that participants
with dementia have an increased risk for automobile
crashes and becoming lost while driving," report
the authors, led by Mark Reger, PhD, of the Veterans
Affairs Puget Sound Health Care System and University
of Washington School of Medicine, where he is a Fellow,
Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences. The progressive
course of dementia further complicates screening procedures
for those who still have mild symptoms.
Reger and his colleagues observe that practitioners
and government agencies face a delicate task, to "consider
privacy, encourage independent living and protect
the patients civil liberties while safeguarding
the patient and others on the road." As a result,
as the pool of people with Alzheimers disease
and other dementias swells, it is increasingly essential
to have valid and reliable procedures to accurately
assess their driving risk.
The authors conducted a "meta-analysis"
- a study of studies -- of 27 primary studies published
between 1988 and 2003 that examined the relationship
between neuropsychological functioning and driving
ability for drivers with dementia. All of the studies
looked at participants with Alzheimers disease,
used well-known neuropsychological tests with standard
administration, measured driving ability formally
(road/non-road) or by caregiver report, and reported
sufficient information about results to allow computation
of an effect-size estimate. The neuropsychological
functions included mental status-general cognition,
attention and concentration, visuospatial skills,
memory, executive functions and language.
Tests of visuospatial skills generally related best
to driving abilities. They may be most helpful in
identifying at-risk drivers, especially as visuospatial
deficits are common in early Alzheimers and
other dementias.
The authors conclude that, "Although visuospatial
deficits alone are not sufficient to recommend driving
restrictions, the results indicate that when visuospatial
deficits are present, clinicians should complete a
careful evaluation of other risk factors." They
are a red flag to look for other problems.
Reger et al. were surprised to see that attention
and concentration tests may be less helpful than some
other tests of functioning. Their effect sizes were
significant but not as large as predicted. Also, if
clinicians get caregiver reports, they should take
into account additional factors to assess risk.
The authors add, "Neuropsychological testing
makes a significant contribution to predicting driving
ability. However, they do not indicate at what level
of impairment a specific patient is unfit to drive."
Further research is needed to determine the right
cutoffs.
www.HealthNewsDigest.com
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