The Cognitive Scale of Basic and Instrumental Activities of Daily Living for Multidomain Mild Cognitive Impairment and Dementia Patients: Validation of its Extended Version
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteEditorial
Cambridge University Press
Materia
Activities of daily living Multidomain mild cognitive impairment Dementia Occupational therapy Executive functions Neuropsychology
Date
2021-06-14Referencia bibliográfica
Montoro-Membila, N... [et al.] (2021). The Cognitive Scale of Basic and Instrumental Activities of Daily Living for Multidomain Mild Cognitive Impairment and Dementia Patients: Validation of its Extended Version. Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society, 1-14. doi:[10.1017/S1355617721000758]
Patrocinador
Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (FPI BES-2009-020741); Regional Government of Andalusia, Spain (Junta de Andalucía SEJ-6351); Fundación para la Investigación Biosanitaria de Andalucía Oriental – Alejandro Otero; University of MálagaRésumé
Objective: To validate an informant-based tool – the extended version of the Cognitive Scale of Basic and Instrumental
Activities of Daily Living (BADL and IADL) or Ext. Cog-ADL Scale – in a larger sample and with a broader range of
cognitive-functional items related to activities of daily living (ADL). Method: The Ext. Cog-ADL Scale was
administered to family informants of 42 patients with dementia, 43 patients with multidomain mild cognitive
impairment (mdMCI), and 23 healthy control participants. We analyzed the convergent and concurrent validity and
external validity of this scale. Results: The Ext. Cog-ADL Scale demonstrated good psychometric properties. Episodic
and working memory tests were the main predictors of most cognitive-functional items of the scale. While patients with
dementia obtained lower scores in most error categories of the scale, affecting both BADL and IADL, mdMCI patients
showed a more specific pattern of difficulties. Apart from the typical alterations in IADL, mdMCI patients also showed
difficulties in several error categories related to BADL (i.e., error detection, problem solving, task self-initiation,
distraction inhibition, and restore). Conclusions: The Ext. Cog-ADL Scale seems to be an adequate tool to capture the
specific pattern of cognitive alterations related to IADL and BADL that differentiates dementia from mdMCI and
healthy aging; it shows that mdMCI can involve specific cognitive difficulties that affect even BADL.