Unawareness of cognitive deficit (cognitive anosognosia) in probable AD and control subjects.
Journal
  Neurology.
Citation
  Neurology. 64(4):693-9
Publication date
  2005 Feb 22
Authors
  Barrett AM
Eslinger PJ
Ballentine NH
Heilman KM
Investigators
  Noel H. Ballentine
Paul N. Eslinger
Grant agencies
  National Center for Research Resources
Grants
  NCRR C06 RR016499
NCRR M01 RR010732
MeSH headings
  Alzheimer Disease
Cognition Disorders
Memory Disorders
Self Assessment (Psychology)
MeSH qualifiers
  psychology
Abstract
  OBJECTIVE: To develop a quantitative method of assessing cognitive anosognosia in six cognitive and two noncognitive domains. METHODS: Control (n = 32) and probable Alzheimer disease (pAD) (n = 14) subjects self-estimated memory, attention, generative behavior, naming, visuospatial skill, limb praxis, mood, and uncorrected vision, both before and after these abilities were assessed. Based on this estimate and their performance the authors calculated an anosognosia ratio (AR) by dividing the difference between estimated and actual performance by an estimated and actual performance sum. With perfect awareness, AR = 0. Overestimating abilities would yield a positive AR (< or =1); underestimation would yield a negative AR (> or =-1). RESULTS: Relative to controls, pAD subjects demonstrated anosognosia. Pre-testing (off-line), pAD subjects overestimated their visuospatial skill; post-testing (on-line), pAD subjects overestimated their memory. Control subjects also made self-rating errors, underestimating their attention pre-testing and overestimating limb praxis and vision post-testing. CONCLUSIONS: This anosognosia assessment method may allow more detailed examination of distorted self-awareness. These results suggest that screening for anosognosia in probable Alzheimer disease (pAD) should include self-estimates of visuospatial function, and that, in pAD, it may be useful to assess anosognosia for amnesia both before and after memory testing.