Clinical Assessment of Irritability, Aggression, and Apathy ... : The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease (original) (raw)

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BURNS, ALISTAIR M.R.C. Psych.1,2; FOLSTEIN, SUSAN M.D.2; BRANDT, JASON Ph.D.2; FOLSTEIN, MARSHAL M.D.2

1Present Address: Section of Old Age Phychiatry, Institute of Psychiarty, De Crespigny Park, London SE5 8AF, United Kingdom

2Department of Psychiatry, The Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland

Abstract

Thirty-one patients with Alzheimer disease (AD) and 26 patients with Huntington disease (HD) were assessed using new scales to measure apathy and irritability. An existing scale was used to assess aggression. A similar prevalence of apathy and irritability was found in the two groups. The HD patients were more aggressive than the AD patients. In a subsample of the two groups, matched for degree of cognitive impairment, the HD patients were found to be more apathetic than the AD group. Irritability was related to be the premorbid trait of “bad temper” in HD but not in AD. There was no interrelationship among the three symptoms in either group.

The scales for irritability and apathy have both interrater and test-retest reliability. They are able to differentiate patients with AD and HD from normal, disease-free control subjects. The usefulness of these scales, in relation to preexisting scales, is discussed.

© Williams & Wilkins 1990. All Rights Reserved.

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