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Clinical references
- Bilingual Aphasia Test Materials
- Gómez Ruiz, I. 2008. Aplicabilidad del Test de la Afasia para Bilingües de Michel Paradis a la población catalano/castillano parlante. Tesis doctoral, Universidad de Barcelona.
- Hambleton, R.K. 1994. Guidelines for adapting educational and psychological tests: A progress report. European Journal of Psychological Assessment, 10: 229-240.
- Goldblum, M. C., & Paradis, M. (1989). The bilingual aphasia test, French adaptation.
- Hummel, K., & Libben, G. (1989). The bilingual aphasia test, English adaptation.
- Paradis, M., Libben, G., & Hummel, K. (1987). The bilingual aphasia test. Hillsdale, NJ:
- Nasreddine ZS, Phillips NA, Bédirian V, Charbonneau S, Whitehead V, Collin I, et al. The Montreal Cognitive Assessment, MoCA: a brief screening tool for mild cognitive impairment. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2005;53:695–699
- Pendlebury ST, Cuthbertson FC, Welch SJV, Mehta Z., Rothwell PM. Underestimation of cognitive impairment by Mini-Mental State Examination versus the Montreal Cognitive Assessment in patients with transient ischemic attack and stroke: A population-based study. Stroke.2010; 41: 1290-1293.
Correspondence to Sarah T. Pendlebury, MRCP, DPhil, Stroke Prevention Research Unit, Level 6 West Wing, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford OX3 9DU, UK. E-mail [email protected]
Background and Purpose— The Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) is insensitive to mild cognitive impairment and executive function. The more recently developed Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), an alternative, brief 30-point global cognitive screen, might pick up more cognitive abnormalities in patients with cerebrovascular disease.
Methods— In a population-based study (Oxford Vascular Study) of transient ischemic attack and stroke, the MMSE and MoCA were administered to consecutive patients at 6-month or 5-year follow-up. Accepted cutoffs of MMSE <27 and MoCA <26 were taken to indicate cognitive impairment.
Results— Of 493 patients, 413 (84%) were testable. Untestable patients were older (75.5 versus 69.9 years, P<0.001) and often had dysphasia (24%) or dementia (15%). Although MMSE and MoCA scores were highly correlated (r2=0.80, P<0.001), MMSE scores were skewed toward higher values, whereas MoCA scores were normally distributed: median and interquartile range 28 (26 to 29) and 23 (20 to 26), respectively. Two hundred ninety-one of 413 (70%) patients had MoCA <26 of whom 162 had MMSE 27, whereas only 5 patients had MoCA 26 and MMSE <27 (P<0.0001). In patients with MMSE 27, MoCA <26 was associated with higher Rankin scores (P=0.0003) and deficits in delayed recall, abstraction, visuospatial/executive function, and sustained attention.
Conclusion— The MoCA picked up substantially more cognitive abnormalities after transient ischemic attack and stroke than the MMSE, demonstrating deficits in executive function, attention, and delayed recall.
Key Words: cognitive impairment • dementia • stroke • vascular cognitive impairment
- The Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) is superior to the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) for the detection of vascular cognitive impairment after acute stroke. YanHong Dong, Vijay Kumar Sharma, Bernard Poon-Lap Chan, Narayanaswamy Venketasubramanian, Hock Luen Teoh, Raymond Chee Seong Seet, Sophia Tanicala, Yiong Huak Chan, Christopher Chen. Journal of the neurological sciences 15 December 2010 (volume 299 issue 1 Pages 15-18 DOI: 10.1016/j.jns.2010.08.051)
The majority of patient with post-stroke Vascular Cognitive Impairment (VCI) have Vascular Cognitive Impairment No Dementia (VCIND). The Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) has been criticized as a poor screening test for VCIND due to insensitivity to visuospatial and executive function impairments. The Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) was designed to be more sensitive to such deficits and may therefore be a superior screening instrument for VCIND. Stable patients within 14days of their index stroke without significant physical disability, aphasia, dysarthria, active psychiatric illness or pre-existing dementia were eligible. Cognitive and neurological measures were administered after informed consent. 100 patients were recruited. Of the 57 patients with unimpaired MMSE scores, 18 (32%) patients had an impaired MoCA score. By comparison, only 2 out of the 41 (4.9%) patients with unimpaired MoCA scores had impaired MMSE scores. Moreover, MMSE domain subtest scores could not differentiate between groups of differing screening test results, whilst MoCA domain subtest scores (Visuospatial/Executive Function, Attention and Recall) could. The MoCA is more sensitive than the MMSE in screening for cognitive impairment after acute stroke. Longitudinal studies are required to establish the prognostic value of MoCA and MMSE evaluation in the acute post-stroke period for cognitive impairment as defined by the standard method of formal neuropsychological evaluation 3–6months after stroke.
- Wong A, Xiong YY, Kwan PW, Chan AY, Lam WW, Wang K, et al. The validity, reliability and clinical utility of the Hong Kong Montreal Cognitive Assessment (HK-MoCA) in patients with cerebral small vessel disease. Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord. 2009;28:81–87