Suscribirse

Maladie d’Alzheimer et évaluation de la temporalité de la vie quotidienne : l’estimation de durée est-elle mieux préservée en mémoire située ou déclarative ? - 29/04/13

Doi : 10.1016/j.amp.2011.12.013 
Thérèse Rivasseau Jonveaux a, , b , Alain Trognon b, Martine Batt b, Marc Braun d, Fabienne Empereur c
a Service de gériatrie, hôpital de Brabois, centre mémoire de ressources et de recherche, 3, rue du Morvan, 54500 Vandœuvre-les-Nancy, France 
b Groupe de recherche sur les communications, service de psychologie, laboratoire Interpsy EA 4432, université Nancy II, BP 33-97, 54000 Nancy, France 
c Unité d’évaluation, service d’épidémiologie et d’évaluations cliniques, hôpitaux de Brabois, CHU de Nancy, allée du Morvan, 54500 Vandœuvre, France 
d IADI U947 Inserm, service de neuroradiologie, hôpital neurologique, CHU de Nancy, 29, avenue de Lattre-de-Tassigny, 54000 Nancy, France 

Auteur correspondant.

Bienvenido a EM-consulte, la referencia de los profesionales de la salud.
El acceso al texto completo de este artículo requiere una suscripción.

páginas 8
Iconografías 1
Vídeos 0
Otros 0

Résumé

Au cours de la maladie d’Alzheimer (MA), l’incapacité à maîtriser la dimension temporelle de la vie quotidienne est une source majeure de handicap. En l’absence d’outil validé existant, la présente recherche vise à contribuer à la compréhension des troubles de l’appropriation de la temporalité de la vie quotidienne chez une population de patients aux stades légers à modérés de la MA. Pour ce faire, nous avons élaboré puis administré une batterie de 12 estimations de durée de tâches quotidiennes à 440 témoins et 22 patients. Cette tâche apparaît préservée et indépendante chez les patients des processus cognitifs évalués, dont ceux impliqués par le test de l’horloge. La dépression n’influence pas cette estimation de durée. Ce type d’estimation de durée met en jeu des processus cognitifs préservés liés à la mémoire procédurale des scripts sur lesquels une approche de réhabilitation ultérieure pourrait se fonder.

El texto completo de este artículo está disponible en PDF.

Abstract

In the course of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) disturbances of the perception of time has been reported by different authors, who used essentially very basic stimuli of very short duration and out of context. Incapacity to be on top of the time dimension in daily life is a major handicap as witnessed by caregivers of these patients. Analysis of the cognitive processes involved in the representation of elapsing time as perceived by Alzheimer patients may potentially elucidate some of the difficulties these patients face in their daily life. The objective of the research presented here is to determine, whether in the course of AD the capacity to estimate the duration of current daily activities is affected or not. Currently no validated tools are available to neuropsychologists and clinicians to assess temporality in Alzheimer disease (AD) patients under daily life conditions. In order to explore this question, we created a time duration estimation test for twelve current daily activities. A preliminary exploration of this method was carried out by using a control group of 440 healthy subjects of different ages and educational levels and with a group of 22 AD patients with mild and moderate stages of the disease. Simultaneously, a neuropsychological assessment has been carried out to evaluate different cognitive abilities of patients. In the control group, gender has no influence on the duration estimation. Age and cultural level do not influence the estimation of time duration of 2/12 activities. The estimation of time duration of these two activities can be used as a short version of the test. Then we compared the group of AD patients to a control group, which has been matched for age, sex and educational level. No significant difference in this time duration estimation task between the control group and the patients was noticed. We conclude that the cognitive processes relevant for this test seems to persist longer in AD as compared with other processes. The time duration estimation does not correlate with any neuropsychological scale and is in particular not related with the clock drawing test result. Surprisingly, depression did not have any influence on the time duration estimation scale in our AD group. It appears that two dimensions of temporality can be distinguished: the first dimension is one that the subject experiences while actually carrying out an activity and this dimension seems to be influenced by depressive mood. The second dimension would apply if an activity is not actually carried out but, if the subject uses only his representation of the activity; on the latter depression does not appear to have an influence. Our scale does not solicit episodic processes relating to a precise spatio-temporal context, but seem to rely on an acquired global experience of temporality, which is the result of cumulative experience of a person either having actually executed these activities or having merely observed them. We hypothesize that in order to estimate the duration of the daily activities patients would rather use procedural memory processes connected to the scripts of the actions knowledge, which seems to be longer preserved in AD patients. The results of this research are in favor of the hypothesis that two ways may exist to manage temporality, as proposed by Chambon, one, controlled, conscious and intentional and a second, automated one which would rely on non-intentional and unconscious processes. Analysing the cognitive processes involved in our approach of temporality in AD, allows to hypothesize an intersection between semantic memory and scripts knowledge included in procedural memory and to suggest that a rehabilitation proposal can be done: procedural mechanisms could be helpful to support semantic processes.

El texto completo de este artículo está disponible en PDF.

Mots clés : Estimation de durée, Évaluation, Maladie d’Alzheimer, Mémoire procédurale, Temporalité

Keywords : Alzheimer disease, Evaluation, Procedural memory, Temporality, Time duration estimation


Esquema


© 2012  Elsevier Masson SAS. Reservados todos los derechos.
Añadir a mi biblioteca Eliminar de mi biblioteca Imprimir
Exportación

    Exportación citas

  • Fichero

  • Contenido

Vol 171 - N° 4

P. 238-245 - mai 2013 Regresar al número
Artículo precedente Artículo precedente
  • Liens entre personnalité dépendante, épisode dépressif majeur et tentative(s) de suicide. Dans une population de 108 suicidants, étude des liens entre personnalité dépendante, dépression et différentes variables
  • Christophe Versaevel, Frédérique Vinckier, Robert Jeanson, Laurent Defromont, Véronique Lebouteiller, Christine Lajugie
| Artículo siguiente Artículo siguiente
  • Consanguinité, schizophrénie et trouble bipolaire
  • Aïcha Dahdouh-Guermouche, Mohammed Taleb, Philippe Courtet, Boualem Semaoune, Alain Malafosse

Bienvenido a EM-consulte, la referencia de los profesionales de la salud.
El acceso al texto completo de este artículo requiere una suscripción.

Bienvenido a EM-consulte, la referencia de los profesionales de la salud.
La compra de artículos no está disponible en este momento.

¿Ya suscrito a @@106933@@ revista ?

Mi cuenta


Declaración CNIL

EM-CONSULTE.COM se declara a la CNIL, la declaración N º 1286925.

En virtud de la Ley N º 78-17 del 6 de enero de 1978, relativa a las computadoras, archivos y libertades, usted tiene el derecho de oposición (art.26 de la ley), el acceso (art.34 a 38 Ley), y correcta (artículo 36 de la ley) los datos que le conciernen. Por lo tanto, usted puede pedir que se corrija, complementado, clarificado, actualizado o suprimido información sobre usted que son inexactos, incompletos, engañosos, obsoletos o cuya recogida o de conservación o uso está prohibido.
La información personal sobre los visitantes de nuestro sitio, incluyendo su identidad, son confidenciales.
El jefe del sitio en el honor se compromete a respetar la confidencialidad de los requisitos legales aplicables en Francia y no de revelar dicha información a terceros.


Todo el contenido en este sitio: Copyright © 2024 Elsevier, sus licenciantes y colaboradores. Se reservan todos los derechos, incluidos los de minería de texto y datos, entrenamiento de IA y tecnologías similares. Para todo el contenido de acceso abierto, se aplican los términos de licencia de Creative Commons.