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Online Tool can help Seniors quickly
determine Risk for Dementia
Newswise, January 14, 2011 — A quick online
assessment tool developed by Johns Hopkins
researchers can help worried seniors find
out if they are at risk of developing
dementia and determine whether they should
seek a comprehensive, face-to-face diagnosis
from a physician, according to a new study.
The tool, which is being refined and
validated, is not meant to replace a full
evaluation from a doctor that includes a
physical exam, blood work, imaging studies
and more. Instead, this assessment provides
a scientific way to help a person educate
herself about a disease that doctors now
believe is best managed if caught early.
“As the population ages and dementia becomes
more prevalent, it’s important to get people
diagnosed early,” says Jason Brandt, Ph.D.,
a professor of psychiatry and behavioral
sciences at the Johns Hopkins University
School of Medicine and the leader of the
study appearing online in the journal
Alzheimer’s & Dementia.
“Alzheimer’s disease and other types of
dementia don’t just creep up on you. They’re
incubating for decades in the brain. This
tool is potentially very useful in
determining who is at risk.”
Among the questions asked on the Dementia
Risk Assessment are about whether a person
has a history of high blood pressure,
depression, diabetes, high cholesterol or
head injury, all of which are considered
well-documented risk factors for dementia.
The assessment also includes a simple memory
test that could point to a subtle cognitive
decline, Brandt says.
The study analyzed responses from 357 people
over the age of 50 who took the assessment
at www.alzcast.org.
Those who scored lowest on the memory test
were significantly older, and were more
likely to be men, have hypertension and
report severe memory problems. And while
only 9 percent of respondents reported they
had severe memory problems, more than
one-third said they had a first-degree
relative with dementia or severe memory loss
— a major risk factor for the condition.
The assessment takes just five to 10 minutes
to complete online, and the questions have
been borrowed from other scientifically
valid assessments.
Brandt says the assessment may be helpful in
weeding out those who have signs of dementia
from those who are simply experiencing the
memory loss that comes with aging or a busy
lifestyle. Not being able to find your keys
or remembering where you parked is rarely a
failsafe sign that a person is suffering
from dementia.
“Our goal is really to educate people about
what some of the risk factors are and,
often, to put people’s minds at ease,” he
says. “We somehow expect our memories to be
as good at 50 as they were at 30. We can’t
run as fast as we could 20 years ago. Why
should our memory be as good?”
Alzheimer’s disease still has no cure, but
early interventions are being used to slow
cognitive decline, Brandt says. Brandt says
he hopes this assessment will get patients
with several risk factors or symptoms to
consult a physician.
Some forms of dementia, he says, may not be
permanent, and getting to a doctor could
help to restore brain function.
Sometimes, Brandt says, seniors are afraid
to mention they are having memory or other
cognitive issues. The new tool, he says,
lets them learn more about themselves and
their individualized risk factors in the
privacy of their homes.
The aging population means that many more
people will be diagnosed with dementia in
the coming decades.
“Screening procedures that have demonstrated
validity and predictive value and are
noninvasive, brief and do not require any
special expertise to administer may have the
greatest potential to be accepted and
actually used by the greatest number of
people,” Brandt says. “This tool, which this
study preliminarily validates, is the first
step toward developing such a procedure.”
Brandt and colleagues are currently
conducting research that compares a
patient’s results from the online Dementia
Risk Assessment with an in-person,
comprehensive evaluation by a physician at
one of two Johns Hopkins clinics.
This research was supported by a grant from
the Geoffrey Beane Foundation’s GB Gives
Back Alzheimer’s Initiative. Mark Rogerson,
Ph.D., of Johns Hopkins also worked on this
study.