G. Kuzis et al., Explicit and implicit learning in patients with Alzheimer disease and Parkinson disease with dementia, NEUROPS NEU, 12(4), 1999, pp. 265-269
Citations number
28
Categorie Soggetti
Neurology
Journal title
NEUROPSYCHIATRY NEUROPSYCHOLOGY AND BEHAVIORAL NEUROLOGY
Objective: To examine the differential impairment of implicit and explicit
memory systems in cortical and subcortical dementias. Background: Whereas v
erbal priming was reported to be impaired in patients with Alzheimer Diseas
e (AD), patients with Parkinson Disease (PD) may be relatively more impaire
d on tasks of motor skill learning. Methods: We examined 15 patients with A
lzheimer disease, 10 patients with Parkinson disease and dementia (PD-D), 1
5 patients with PD but no dementia, and 24 age-comparable normal control su
bjects with a neuropsychologic battery that included tests of explicit memo
ry (Buschke Selective Reminding Test, Benton Visual Retention Test, Digits
Span), and tests of implicit memory (Word-Stem Completion task and the Maze
Test). Results: AD and PD-D groups showed similar deficits on all measures
of explicit memory, and performed significantly worse than PD patients wit
hout dementia and normal control subjects. On the other hand, there were no
significant between-group differences in any of the measures of implicit m
emory. Conclusions: Our study demonstrated preserved implicit learning in t
he context of severe explicit learning deficits in patients with dementia,
but could not demonstrate a different profile of memory deficits between so
-called cortical and subcortical dementias.