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New dementia screening tool Is more sensitive
Newswise — A screening tool for dementia developed by Saint Louis
University geriatricians appears to work better in identifying mild
cognitive problems in the elderly than the commonly used Mini Mental
Status Examination, according to a new study.
Physicians routinely administer the Mini Mental Status Examination (MMSE)
to patients who they believe may have Alzheimer’s disease. Both the
MMSE and SLU’s screening tool – the Saint Louis University Mental
Status Examination (SLUMS) – indicate to doctors when they should
pursue further testing in diagnosing dementia.
“This early detection of mild neurocognitive disorder by the SLUMS
offers the opportunity for the clinicians to begin early treatment
as it becomes available,” says Syed Tariq, M.D., lead author and
associate professor of geriatric medicine at Saint Louis University.
John Morley, M.D., director of the division of geriatric medicine at
Saint Louis University, created the SLUMS to screen more educated
patients and to detect early cognitive problems.
"There are potential treatments available and they slow down the
progression of the disease," says Morley, who is a coinvestigator.
"The earlier you treat, the better people seem to do. But families
go through denial and sometimes miss diagnosing dementia until its
symptoms are no longer mild."
The researchers found the new screening tool developed by SLU
detects early cognitive problems missed by the MMSE.
“The Mini Mental Status Examination has limitations, especially with
regard to its use in more educated patients and as a screen for mild
neurocognitive disorder,” Tariq says.
It takes a clinician about seven minutes to administer the SLUMS,
which supplements the Mini Mental Status Examination by asking
patients to perform tasks such as doing simple math computations,
naming animals, recalling facts and drawing the hands on a clock.
Both screening tools work at detecting dementia, the research found.
“SLUMS has the advantage in that it can help the clinician identify
patients with mild neurocognitive disorder on the initial visit
compared to MMSE, which requires a follow up screening,” Tariq says.
Saint Louis University researchers used both screening tools to test
705 men who were at least 60 and treated at the Geriatric Research
Education Clinical Center, Veterans Administration Hospitals in St.
Louis in 2003. They found that while both tools detected dementia,
only the SLUMS recognized a group of patients as having mild
cognitive problems.
The SLUMS, which is free and currently used at many Veterans
Administration hospitals, is available at this link
http://medschool.slu.edu/agingsuccessfully/pdfsurveys/slumsexam_05.pdf
The researchers cautioned that neither the SLUMS nor the MMSE
screening tools substitute for clinical assessment and
neuropsychological testing to diagnose cognitive problems and
dementia.
The study appeared in the November issue of the American Journal
of Geriatric Psychiatry.
Established in 1836, Saint Louis University School of Medicine has
the distinction of awarding the first M.D. degree west of the
Mississippi River. Saint Louis University School of Medicine is a
pioneer in geriatric medicine, organ transplantation, chronic
disease prevention, cardiovascular disease, neurosciences and
vaccine research, among others. The School of Medicine trains
physicians and biomedical scientists, conducts medical research, and
provides health services on a local, national and international
level.