Use of electroencephalography to detect Alzheimer's disease in Down's syndrome

1996 
We studied the role of electroencephalography (EEG) in the diagnosis of Alzheimer-type dementia in patients with Down's syndrome. 197 patients with Down's syndrome were monitored for 5 to 8 years. Aspects of cognitive functioning were assessed twice yearly. EEGs were scored in a blind fashion, and changes in the EEG were compared to changes in cognitive functioning. When possible, a neuropathological post-mortem examination was performed. Cognitive functioning was drastically reduced in 29 patients. The dominant occipital rhythm became slower at the onset of the cognitive deterioration, and eventually disappeared. In 11 of these patients neuropathological examination showed a severe form of Alzheimer's disease. Changes in the frequency of the dominant occipital rhythm could distinguish between Alzheimer's disease or other causes as underlying the cognitive decline. Slowing of the dominant occipital rhythm seems to be related to Alzheimer's disease in patients with Down's syndrome, and the frequency of the dominant occipital activity decreases at the onset of cognitive deterioration. The EEG is thus an important tool in the clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer-type dementia in patients with Down's syndrome.
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