Dementia subtype predicted 5 years early
Researchers have found a way to predict whether a person will develop Alzheimer's Disease or vascular dementia up to five years before diagnosis.
"Knowing whether someone is at risk of developing vascular dementia is important, because we can treat this condition and possibly prevent the onset of dementia," says Dr. Mary Tierney, Director of the Primary Care Research Unit at Sunnybrook and senior author of the study. "The preventative stroke treatments we use, such as baby Aspirin, do have risks, so these findings will help clinicians determine which patients will benefit most from these treatments," she adds.
Researchers examined the accuracy of two neuropsychological tests that measure learning ability and verbal fluency along with the Hachinski Ischemic Score, which measures the extent of vascular disease.
From these results, researchers were able to accurately predict which groups the 504 participants would fall into after five years: those who developed Alzheimer's disease, those who developed vascular dementia, and those who would remain stable or progress to other diagnoses. After five years, 65 people were diagnosed with Alzheimer's, and 22 with vascular dementia.
Those who developed Alzheimer's showed more difficulty learning new information, but had better verbal fluency, or the ability to rapidly access words from one's vocabulary, than those who developed vascular dementia. Those who developed vascular dementia had completely opposite results — they could learn new information, but had difficulty with verbal fluency.
While medications are available to treat symptoms of dementia, and measures can be taken to prevent or delay onset of the disease, there is currently no cure.