Ongoing support is critical for people living with dementia. As a care worker or healthcare professional,you are in a unique position to empower patients and their loved ones with relevant information that will help them to understand and manage their condition, for both the immediate and distant...
DSM-5Neurocognitive disordersMild Cognitive ImpairmentMild Neurocognitive DisorderBackground and Objectives: According to existing data the term dementia was invented in the first century BC. It was introduced in the European literature in the 17th and 18th centuries AC. At the end of the 17th ...
designs.PRIMARY OBJECTIVE: Traumatic brain injury (TBI) sustained during childhood can affect a number of socio-cognitive skills; however, little attention has focused on the integrity of moral reasoning in the assessment of post-TBI social sequelae and the role of empathy and intelligence on moral...
Dementia in multiple sclerosis is not a well-defined condition as it may refer to different clinical situations. In addition, as the term has now disappeared from the last version of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5), dementia may be now defined as a major neu...
L. Schroeter et al., "Prevalence of DSM-5 mild neurocognitive disorder in dementia-free older adults-- results of the population-based LIFE-adult-study," The Ameri- can Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 2016.Luck T, Then FS, Schroeter ML, Witte V, Engel C, Loeffler M, Thiery J, Vill...
Dementia in multiple sclerosis is not a well-defined condition as it may refer to different clinical situations. In addition, as the term has now disappeared from the last version of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5), dementia may be now defined as a major neu...
is characterised by a progressive decline in several domains of cognitive abilities such as executive functions, learning and memory, language, perceptual and motor functions, complex attention, and social cognition (DSM-5). The duration is up to 12–15 years. Cognitive decline has an impact on ...
New DSM-V neurocognitive disorders criteria and their impact on diagnostic classifications of mild cognitive impairment and dementia in a memory clinic setting... Tay, LauraLim, Wee ShiongChan, MarkAli, NoorhazlinaMahanum, ShariffahChew, PamelaLim, JuneChong, Mei Sian - 《American Journal of Ger...
DSM-V describes the functional decline of major neurocognitive disorder as ‘sufficient to interfere with independence’. Thus, the defining difference between CIND and established dementia is in functional ability, with social and occupational function preserved in CIND but impaired in dementia. ...
The definition conforms to Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM)-5 and International Classification of Diseases 10th edition (ICD-10) for dementia, which has been validated against a nationwide population-based survey [16]. Doctor-diagnosed memory-related diseases were identified ...