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Azheimer's
disease onset tied to lapses in attention, study suggests

Nov. 2, 2005 — People in early stages of Alzheimer's disease
have greater difficulty shifting attention back and forth
between competing sources of information, a finding that
offers new support for theories that contend breakdowns in
attention play an important role in the onset of the
disease.
"Our results provide evidence that breakdowns in attention
produce a clear change in the early stages of
Alzheimer's-related dementia," said study co-author David A.
Balota, a professor of psychology in Arts & Sciences at
Washington University in St. Louis.
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Routine tasks that require the
shifting of attention, such as driving a car while
conversing with a passenger, may become more
challenging for people in very early stages of
Alzheimer's disease, suggests a new study from
Washington University in St. Louis. |
Published in a recent issue of the journal Neuropsychology,
the study suggests that subtle breakdowns in attention may
offer a reliable clue that a patient is grappling with early
symptoms of Alzheimer's-related dementia.
The findings are important because they offer clinicians and
researchers another tool by which to better predict and
understand dementia of the Alzheimer's type early in its
history. Psychologists focus on early detection in part
because current medications are useful only when given very
early in the course of the disease.
While it's well known that memory skills deteriorate as
Alzheimer's progresses, recent research by Balota and Duchek,
among others, have championed the notion that breakdowns in
attention may be at the heart of many cognitive problems
linked to Alzheimer's. Although memory problems also show up
in early stages of the disease, this study suggests that
underlying declines in attention may be contributing to
these memory mishaps and to other cognitive difficulties
often associated with the disease.
"Because attention is prerequisite for memory, one might
suspect that attention is one of the contributing culprits,
at least early on in the disease," suggests study lead
author Janet M. Duchek, an associate professor of
psychology.
Participants for the study were drawn from volunteers at the
Alzheimer's Disease Research Center at Washington
University. Duchek and Balota studied 94 older participants,
average age mid-70s, who were healthy control individuals or
individuals diagnosed with very mild, or mild dementia of
the Alzheimer's type.
In an effort to gauge each group's ability to effectively
monitor and switch among competing channels of information,
Duchek and Balota relied on a well-established psychological
testing technique know as the dichotic listening task.
The Dichotomyy
Developed in the 1950s, the dichotic listening test plays off
the fact that humans are hardwired to process sensory
information in a cross-lateral fashion - words heard in the
left ear tend to be processed in the right hemisphere of the
brain, and vice-versa. Since the left hemisphere of the
brain is typically dominant for language processing, words
presented in the right ear often have an advantage over
words presented simultaneously in the left ear — the right
ear-left hemisphere processing channel is said to be
"pre-potent" in that it has a default processing advantage
over the left ear-right hemisphere channel.
By asking participants to recall numbers in the order they
were presented to either ear, the researchers were able to
measure an individual's ability to switch back and forth
between right-left processing channels, and more
importantly, to monitor how well attention skills allowed
them to overcome the "pre-potent" tendency to favor
information presented to the default right ear-left
hemisphere language channel.
As predicted, people with early dementia tended to rely more
often on the default channel, reporting digits presented to
the right ear far better than they reported digits presented
to the left ear. When the researchers controlled for overall
recall performance, the mild dementia group recalled 21.7%
more information from their right ear vs. left ear, and even
the very mildly affected group recalled 11.3% more from the
right ear. The control participants only recalled 5.8% more
from the right vs. left ear.
The study confirms that very early in the disease, people
have problems with selective attention. This problem,
although not as obvious as memory loss, may also explain why
early-stage patients start to struggle with everyday tasks
that call for processing a lot of information, such as
driving. This speculation is supported by prior findings
that performance on dichotic listening predicts accident
rates in commercial bus drivers.
Findings from this study, the research team suggests,
converge with accumulating evidence that individuals with
early stage Alzheimer's Disease have breakdowns controlling
prepotent pathways across a variety of experimental
paradigms, which place minimal demands on memory systems.
"Our hope," Duchek said, "is that this work increases
recognition that Alzheimer's Disease is not simply a disease
of memory."