Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Components Studied in Literature Discussion and Conclusion

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Components Studied in Literature Discussion and Conclusion"— Presentation transcript:

1 Components Studied in Literature Discussion and Conclusion
Using Event-Related Potentials to Help Diagnose Mild Cognitive Impairment and Alzheimer's disease: A Systematic Review Cassandra Morrison1,2,Sheida Rabipour1, Frank Knoefel1,2, Vanessa Taler1,2 1University Of Ottawa, 2Bruyère Research Institute Stephanie’s note for Figure 4: These bounds were applied to all data (and therefore both images). They are the sensor levels below which I determined there was no person on the bed and beyond which I assumed there was more than one person on the bed. The top plot is the average exerted pressure, whereas the bottom plot is the standard deviation. The standard deviation represents the amount of movement each foot experienced - so, theses plots show that the left foot exerted more pressure and moved less when compared to the right foot. Introduction Results Increased age is associated with increased risk of cognitive impairment ranging from healthy aging to mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer’s disease (AD) Neuropsychological tests offer a sensitivity of only 75-80% when attempting to diagnose MCI and AD1 There is currently no accepted diagnostic tool for MCI or AD Electroencephalography (EEG) generates event-related potentials (ERPs) through cognitive tasks ERPs enable the monitoring of electrophysiological changes associated with cognitive performance2,3 Common cognitive tasks include: Oddball, Go/NoGo, and N-back to elicit ERPs such as the P300, and N200 Components Studied in Literature P50 P100 PNwm N100 N160 N170 P200 N200 P300 N300 N400 P450 P600 Type of Tasks Used Auditory Oddball Visual Oddball N-back Go/NoGo Auditory Other Visual Other Groups Examined Healthy adults over 60 vs young controls Individuals with MCI vs healthy older adults Individuals with AD vs those with MCI and/or healthy older adults Right Foot Left Foot Key Findings The P300 amplitude and latency appear to differentiate healthy older adults from young adults, MCI from HC, and AD from MCI and HC The N200 latency appear to discriminate MCI from healthy aging and AD from HC and MCI The N100 & P200 components do not appear to differentiate between healthy aging, MCI and AD Many other components have begun showing differences between groups, but have minimal research completed on them Limitations Many studies do not report both behavioural and electrophysiological responses to the tasks Not reporting sensitivity and specificity between the groups The use of anticholinergic medications or cholinesterase inhibitors is not controlled for Natural and environmental influences on brain activity patterns are often not controlled for Some studies compare AD to healthy controls but not those with MCI Left Foot Objective To review the literature on the degree to which brain activity patterns (ERPs) help distinguish between healthy aging, MCI and AD Methods Electronic search: PsycINFO & Medline for peer-reviewed articles published between 2005 and June 2016 Keywords: Event-related potentials, Alzheimer’s disease, Electroencephalography, Mild cognitive impairment Articles: English, humans 60 years of age and older Discussion and Conclusion Inclusion Criteria: Older adults (healthy aging, MCI or AD patients) Compare to younger controls or each other Peer-reviewed journal At least one ERP component elicited by visual or auditory paradigms Many ERP components have minimal research completed on them making it difficult to determine whether or not they are acceptable components to diagnose MCI and AD The current literature suggests that the P300 and N200 are sensitive to electrophysiological alterations associated with cognitive impairment and may serve as a potential biomarker for diagnosing MCI and AD Some research suggests that the P300 and N200 latency can provide a sensitivity and specificity ranging from 70%-100% when discriminating between the groups Future research may benefit from combining neuropsychological testing with ERP components to obtain more accurate diagnosis of healthy cognitive decline compared to MCI and AD Future research should further explore ERP components that remain poorly understood, to better elucidate how brain activity changes over time  Examining the relationships between multiple ERP components may increase diagnostic accuracy  Bibliography: 1Liu, Y., Paajanen, T., Zhang, Y., Westman, E., Wahlund, L.O., Simmons, A., et al., (2011) Neurobiology of Aging. 32(7): Papaliagkas, V.T., Kimiskidis, V.K., Tsolaki, M.N., Anogianakis G. . Clinical Neurophysiology 122(7): Liddell, B.J., Paul, R.H., Arns, M., Gordon, N., Kukla, M., Rowe, D., et al. (2007) Integrative neuroscience 6(1): Daltrozzo, J., & Conway, C. M. (2014) Frontiers in human neuroscience 8:437


Download ppt "Components Studied in Literature Discussion and Conclusion"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google