Dv. Nelson et al., BRIEF NEUROPSYCHOLOGIC DIFFERENTIATION OF DEMENTED VERSUS DEPRESSED ELDERLY INPATIENTS, General hospital psychiatry, 15(6), 1993, pp. 409-416
Recent investigations have suggested the utility of brief, psychometri
c screening batteries in the early detection of abnormal mental declin
e. This study extended the investigation of one of these batteries, co
mprised of three tests (Controlled Oral Word Association, Visual Reten
tion, Temporal Orientation), to the difficult issue of differentiating
dementia from depression in a hospitalized sample composed of a group
of depressed only patients (N = 50) vs an age-matched demented group
(N = 50), some of whom presented mixed dementia/depression syndromes.
Demented patients consistently performed more poorly as a group than d
epressed patients on each of the three measures. This was the case eve
n when three-group (demented only, mixed demented/depressed, depressed
only) comparisons were conducted. Impairment was more common on one o
r more tests with demented vs depressed patients. However, limitations
for screening purposes and for the definitive detection of dementia w
ere noted in view of only moderate predictive power of the tests with
discriminant function analysis. Nevertheless, the potential clinical u
tility of the three tests in the general hospital and other primary ca
re settings was apparent.