Scheduled maintenance

This website is scheduled for maintenance on 15th July 2026. There may be a short period of downtime, expected to last no longer than 2 hours, at some point during the day.

 

Thank you for your patience while we complete this work.

 

Neuropsychological differences in Alzheimer's disease depending on the age of onset

Elsevier, Revista Espanola de Geriatria y Gerontologia, Volume 59, 1 January 2024
Authors: 
Echeveste B., Tellechea P., Montoya G., Espinoza-Vinces C., Fernandez-Montero A., Riverol M.

Introduction: Early-onset Alzheimer's disease (EOAD) has been defined as a dementia due to AD presenting before the arbitrarily established age of 65 (as opposed to late-onset Alzheimer's disease or LOAD). There is still little research about other age sub-groups, the use of so-called senile dementia has been banished, usually including it within the late-onset Alzheimer's dementia. To the extent of our knowledge, there are no studies comparing the neuropsychological features of very-late-onset patients with early and late-onset ones. Methods: We retrospectively selected 359 patients with a diagnosis of probable AD dementia. We subdivided patients into three groups attending to the age of onset of the disease: early-onset AD (EOAD; younger than 65 years old), late-onset AD (LOAD; between 65 and 80) and very-late-onset AD (VLOAD; defined here as onset age older than 80), and then we compared their neuropsychological results. Results: AD patients with a younger age at onset scored worse on attention, executive function and visuospatial skills, while older-onset patients scored worse in memory tasks and language. Patients with a very-late-onset differed from the late-onset ones in a greater impairment of semantic fluency and naming. Conclusion: Although the point of separation between EOAD and later-onset forms of EA at the age of 65 is an arbitrary one, our study shows that there are significant differences between these groups from a neuropsychological point of view. However, these differences do seem to follow a linear trend with age, rather than representing fundamentally distinct clinical pictures.

Category:

Tags: