How Patients With Multiple Sclerosis Perceive Cognitive Slowing

被引:14
作者
Roberg, Brandon L. [1 ]
Bruce, Jared M. [1 ]
Lovelace, Chris T. [2 ]
Lynch, Sharon [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Missouri, Dept Psychol, Kansas City, MO 64110 USA
[2] Shepherd Univ, Dept Psychol, Shepherdstown, WV USA
[3] Univ Kansas, Med Ctr, Dept Neurol, Landon Ctr Aging, Kansas City, KS 66103 USA
关键词
Multiple sclerosis; Processing speed; Anxiety; Self-report; Motor functioning; Cognitive rehabilitation; INFORMATION-PROCESSING SPEED; AFFECTIVE MEMORY BIASES; NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL PERFORMANCE; DEPRESSION INVENTORY; INITIAL VALIDATION; SELF-REPORT; IMPAIRMENT; FATIGUE; IMPACT; DYSFUNCTION;
D O I
10.1080/13854046.2012.733413
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
Slowed processing speed is the primary cognitive deficit in multiple sclerosis (MS). However, no studies have examined how patients perceive this deficit. The purpose of this paper is to examine perceived processing speed difficulties in clinical and community samples of MS patients. As expected, MS patients reported more processing speed difficulties than controls. Perceived processing speed difficulties were significantly associated with impulsivity, slowed motor speed, greater anxiety, and increased introversion. In contrast, perceived processing speed did not correlate well with objective measures of processing speed. Findings showed that MS patients perceive their thinking to be significantly slowed. Perceived cognitive slowing was most related to performance on motor tasks and elevated anxiety. Evaluation of anxiety and patient education about objective measures versus subjective perceptions of slowed processing speed may be helpful to MS patients who report significant cognitive slowing.
引用
收藏
页码:1278 / 1295
页数:18
相关论文
共 66 条
[51]   Metamemory in multiple sclerosis: exploring affective and executive contributors [J].
Randolph, JJ ;
Arnett, PA ;
Freske, P .
ARCHIVES OF CLINICAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 2004, 19 (02) :259-279
[52]   Metamemory and tested cognitive functioning in multiple sclerosis [J].
Randolph, JJ ;
Arnett, PA ;
Higginson, CI .
CLINICAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGIST, 2001, 15 (03) :357-368
[53]   INFORMATION-PROCESSING SPEED IN PATIENTS WITH MULTIPLE-SCLEROSIS [J].
RAO, SM ;
STAUBINFAUBERT, P ;
LEO, GJ .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 1989, 11 (04) :471-477
[54]   COGNITIVE DYSFUNCTION IN MULTIPLE-SCLEROSIS .2. IMPACT ON EMPLOYMENT AND SOCIAL FUNCTIONING [J].
RAO, SM ;
LEO, GJ ;
ELLINGTON, L ;
NAUERTZ, T ;
BERNARDIN, L ;
UNVERZAGT, F .
NEUROLOGY, 1991, 41 (05) :692-696
[55]   CORRELATION OF MAGNETIC-RESONANCE IMAGING WITH NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL TESTING IN MULTIPLE-SCLEROSIS [J].
RAO, SM ;
LEO, GJ ;
HAUGHTON, VM ;
AUBINFAUBERT, PS ;
BERNARDIN, L .
NEUROLOGY, 1989, 39 (02) :161-166
[56]   Recommendations from the national multiple sclerosis society clinical outcomes assessment task force [J].
Rudick, R ;
Antel, J ;
Confavreux, C ;
Cutter, G ;
Ellison, G ;
Fischer, J ;
Lublin, F ;
Miller, A ;
Petkau, J ;
Rao, S ;
Reingold, S ;
Syndulko, K ;
Thompson, A ;
Wallenberg, J ;
Weinshenker, B ;
Willoughby, E .
ANNALS OF NEUROLOGY, 1997, 42 (03) :379-382
[57]   Aging and measures of processing speed [J].
Salthouse, TA .
BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2000, 54 (1-3) :35-54
[58]   Overconfidence and the Big Five [J].
Schaefer, PS ;
Williams, CC ;
Goodie, AS ;
Campbell, WK .
JOURNAL OF RESEARCH IN PERSONALITY, 2004, 38 (05) :473-480
[59]   Cognition in the early stage of multiple sclerosis [J].
Schulz, Doreen ;
Kopp, Bruno ;
Kunkel, Annett ;
Faiss, Juergen H. .
JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY, 2006, 253 (08) :1002-1010
[60]  
Smith A., 1982, Symbol Digit Modalities Test: Manual