Abstract:
We investigated the range of behavioral abnormalities in patients
with Alzheimer's disease (AD) compared with normal age-matched control
subjects. The range of behavioral disturbances manifested and the
relationship between specific abnormalities with the level of cognitive
impairment have not been established. Fifty consecutive outpatients with
mild (n 3D 17), moderate (n 3D 20), and severe (n 3D 13) AD and 40
age-matched normal controls were evaluated for behavioral abnormalities
occurring in the month preceding the interview. The caregivers of the
patients and the spouses of the control subjects were interviewed with
the Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI). The frequency and severity of the
following 10 behaviors were assessed: delusions, hallucinations,
agitation, dysphoria, anxiety, euphoria, apathy, disinhibition,
irritability, and aberrant motor behavior. Correlations among these 10
behaviors and their relationship with cognitive impairment were also
investigated. Eighty-eight percent of AD patients had measurable
behavioral changes. All 10 behaviors were significantly increased in the
AD patients compared with normal subjects. The most common behavior was
apathy, which was exhibited by 72% of patients, followed by agitation
(60%), anxiety (48%), irritability (42%), dysphoria and aberrant motor
behavior (both 38%), disinhibition (36%), delusions (22%), and
hallucinations (10%). Agitation, dysphoria, apathy, and aberrant motor
behavior were significantly correlated wit cognitive impairment