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Summary lectures Advanced Clinical Neuropsychology

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Comprehensive summary of the lectures of the course 'Advanced Clinical Neuropsychology'.

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  • April 2, 2017
  • 34
  • 2016/2017
  • Summary

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By: Mayke123 • 5 year ago

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Advanced Clinical Neuropsychology – Summary Lectures
Topic 1 – General Introduction and Cost Effectiveness

Definition of a clinical neuropsychologist (National Academy of Neuropsychology, 2001):




Dimensions of a clinical neuropsychological examination:
▪ Processing speed
▪ Attention
▪ Memory and learning
▪ Executive functions
▪ Visuospatial skills
▪ Speech and language functions
▪ Perceptual skills (auditory, visual and tactual)
▪ Psychomotor speed and coordination of simple motor responses
▪ Emotional and motivational characteristics
▪ Social functioning and social cognition
▪ Self-awareness of level of functioning and judgements regarding psychosocial implications

Administration of neuropsychological tests, scoring, interpretation and reporting of tests results is time consuming -> “Brief”
assessments take around 2 hours, extensive assessments 8 to 10 hours (without scoring, interpretation and reporting).
➢ Consequently -> Neuropsychological examinations are expensive.
➢ Thus -> Neuropsychological examinations might need justification (in particular in times of financial crisis).

Clinical neuropsychological examinations from an economic perspective:
▪ The costs are more (720,000 a year) than the income (420,000 per year).
▪ So why examinations? -> Because of markers of values.

Marker of value:
▪ Refers to money equivalent (e.g. cost saving) of the service received.
▪ Comparison between costs of assessment and treatment, with money saved by avoiding other health care costs and by
returning an individual to work and social responsibility.

Objective markers:
▪ Reduce costs and liability -> Examples:
– Savings associated with identification of malingerers (unnecessary medical costs, trial costs).
– Savings associated with differential diagnosis on basis of neuropsychological assessments, e.g. between dementia
and depression.
» Psychiatric treatment available for depression -> Which might result in productive lifestyle of patients.
» If neuropsychological findings are indicative of early dementia -> Patients and families can plan for the
patients’ early significant decline in cognitive and behavioral functioning.
▪ Improve QoL -> By revealing cognitive deficits that would have otherwise gone undetected and might have impacted QoL
negatively (e.g. undetected impaired executive functioning led to bankruptcy of man’s furniture shop).
▪ Assess the effectiveness of treatment.

, ▪ Guide treatment procedures -> E.g. neuropsychological findings contribute significantly to decision whether patients undergo
epilepsy surgery.
▪ Provide a continuum of care for patients -> E.g. clinical neuropsychologists consult with patients and their families about the
patients’ deficits, and prepares them to deal with intermediate and long-term consequences of patients’ brain dysfunctions.
▪ Improve physician education and decision making -> E.g. patients and their families may suffer from pain, stress and economic
burden when patients return prematurely to work.

Subjective markers:
▪ Reduce patients’ sense of psychological aloneness with daily problems -> E.g. relief of a patient with brain tumour (“I am not
mad”) when describing an association between deficits and tumour location to her.
▪ Reduce patients’ expectations, confusion and frustration about the nature of their disturbances -> Patients and families
often have unrealistic expectations or wrong understandings about deficits and their development.
▪ Help family members feel less guilty in making decisions regarding brain-dysfunctional adults and children.
→ Many families struggle with the issue of placing a loved-one in a residential/nursing home.
→ In children -> Often considerable relief when parents learn that problems (e.g. ADHD) are not the consequence of
“poor” parenting or psychodynamic processes.
→ Example -> Feelings of guilt and self-reproach of father who slapped daughter in the face and who got a brain tumour
diagnosed 10 days later.

Topic 2 – Fatigue

Significant proportion of general population affected by excessive fatigue -> One of the most common complaints reported to primary
care physicians.
➢ Frequent and prolonged tiredness interfering with everyday life in about 27% of patients in primary care settings.

Pathological fatigue is characterized by (compared to non-pathological):
▪ Greater intensity;
▪ Longer duration;
▪ More disabling effects on functional activities;
▪ Remains after rest as a severe condition.

Fatigue is viewed as both symptom and disease.

Fatigue as a symptom:
▪ Often reported as the most disabling symptom in many diseases by affecting the patient’s physical, psychological and social
well-being.
▪ Non-specific symptom, because it can be indicative of many causes or conditions:
– Neurological conditions (e.g. TBI, MS, stroke, Parkinson’s);
– Psychiatric diseases (e.g. depression, somatoform disorders);
– Medical conditions (e.g. infections, cancer, coronary heart disease, thyroid abnormalities);
– Medications (e.g. anti-histamines, chemo);
– Unhealthy lifestyles (e.g. sleep deprivation);

Fatigue as a disease:
▪ Often part of a group of ‘unexplained’ illnesses (e.g. chronic fatigue syndrome, CFS), with little understanding of its causes.
▪ CFS = Persistent debilitating fatigue for at least 6 months not due to ongoing exertion, not substantially relieved by rest, and
not caused by other medical conditions.
▪ Chronic fatigue = Estimated to occur in 4% to 5% in the general population.

Defining fatigue:
▪ No general consensus on a universal definition of the term fatigue.
▪ This remains a major obstacle to understanding the clinical manifestations of fatigue.

Fatigue van be conceptualized as:
▪ A subjective feeling -> Example for a definition emphasizing subjective experience: “A subjective lack of physical and/or mental
energy that is perceived by the individual or caregiver to interfere with usual or desired activities”.

, ▪ A performance decrement -> Example for a definition emphasizing changes in objective performance: “Any exercise-induced
reduction in the maximal capacity to generate force or power output”.
➢ Clinical definitions of fatigue focus primarily on patients’ subjective feelings of fatigue!

Problem -> Poor correlation between subjective and behavioural (or objective, performance-based) fatigue.
➢ Lack of correlation between objective measurement and subjective experience hinders better understanding of the enigma
of fatigue.

Another categorization:
▪ Peripheral fatigue -> Defined as failure to sustain force or power output because of neuromuscular dysfunction outside of the
CNS.
▪ Central fatigue -> Defined as resulting from failure to achieve and maintain the recruitment of high-threshold motor units,
implicating dysfunction in the CNS.
➢ However, again different definitions by different articles.
➢ Categorization is difficult -> Even motor fatigue can result from muscle fatigue (peripheral), or from brain control over the
muscle (central).
➢ Different illnesses vary in the relative contributions of peripheral and central fatigue to the overall experience of fatigue.
➢ Contribution of both peripheral and central fatigue, to overall subjective reports of fatigue is not well understood.

Fatigue is a multidimensional construct, it compromises at least four components:
▪ Behavior (effects on performance);
▪ Feeling (subjective experience);
▪ Mechanism (physiological and psychological);
▪ Context (e.g. environment).

Neurobiological correlates -> Fatigue has been suggested as a general indicator of brain
damage, but study of neural mechanisms is still in its infancy.
➢ Primary mechanisms of fatigue include:
→ Basal ganglia;
→ Frontal lobes;
→ Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis;
→ Proinflammatory cytokines affecting neural metabolism.

Limbic encephalitis -> Inflammation of the brain affecting the limbic system. Disease however seldom limited to the limbic system.
Myotonic dystrophy -> Inherited disorder of muscle function which can also affect other body systems.
Chiari malformation -> Downward displacement of cerebellum (cerebellar tonsils) through foramen magnum.

Little doubt that the experience of fatigue is a manifestation of dysfunctional brain activity, however, research supports the involvement
of multiple dimensions, with biological, psychological, and psychosocial factors contributing to the experience of fatigue.

Primary fatigue -> Caused by its primary neural mechanisms (e.g. changes in basal ganglia activation during fatigue-producing activity).
Secondary fatigue -> Includes factors perpetuating or exacerbating its effects (e.g. deconditioning, sleep habits, medication).
➢ Example:
– MS may cause the initial symptoms of fatigue through specific biological mechanisms (e.g. basal ganglia, HPA,
cytokines, demyelination).
– Fatigue symptom may be exacerbated by secondary factors such as deconditioning, sleep disturbance, depression
and pain.

Although 42% of patients with PD complain of fatigue, only 25% (!) of doctors recognize the symptom -> This difference is much less for
e.g. depression, anxiety and sleep problems.
➢ Indicating that clinicians may not pay sufficient attention to fatigue as a symptom of the disorder.
➢ Emphasizing the importance of assessment of fatigue in neurological and psychiatric disorders.

Assessment -> Reflects the two conceptualizations of fatigue:
1. Self-report / questionnaires (subjective feeling):
– A number of questionnaires available for use in a variety of clinical populations (e.g. cancer, MS, CFS) as well as
healthy individuals.

, * Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS) – subject needs to rate their level of fatigue and its effects on daily functioning.
* Fatigue Descriptive Scale (FDS) – looks at severity, frequency and quality of fatigue caused by MS.
* Modified Fatigue Impact Scale (MFIS) – self-report, can be used to generate scores for physical, cognitive,
and psychosocial functioning over the last four weeks.
* Neurological Fatigue Index (NFI-MS) – specific to MS.
* Visual Analogue Scale for Fatigue (VAS-F) – individual can mark on a horizontal 10 cm scale how much
fatigue has an influence over completion of a named task.
– Characteristics of questionnaires:
A. Number of items -> Questionnaires range in length (from single item scales to longer, multidimensional
assessments).
 Authors of focused scales argue: Pure measures of fatigue are more homogenous (measuring
only the core feelings of fatigue and excluding other aspects which might be better assessed by
separate instruments).
 Authors of multidimensional scales argue: Including many factors is necessary to assess the
complexity of fatigue.
B. Item content -> Most scales include items to assess both (I) feelings of fatigue and (II) the perceived impact
of fatigue on the lives of patients (e.g. physical or mental activities).
 To measure the core feelings of fatigue, questionnaires generally ask about the degree to which
respondents feel tired, fatigued or worn out.
 Content varies to some extent with the targeted audience -> E.g. questions regarding particular
vulnerability of patients with MS to heat-related fatigue.
C. Duration of fatigue -> Important issue! -> However, many questionnaires fail to ask subjects how long they
have experienced fatigue symptoms.
 Unfortunate because longer-lasting fatigue can signal greater pathology.
D. Time frame -> Many scales fail to specify the time frame on which respondents should focus when
answering items (e.g. right now, over the past week(s), in general).
 Appropriate time frame depends in part on the clinical or research objective at hand (e.g. for
examining pathological fatigue associated with a neurological disorder a longer duration may be
appropriate).
 A specified time frame can be helpful in monitoring changes in fatigue associated with disease
course or treatment approach.
 Another temporal aspect of fatigue is its diurnal pattern, involving assessment of whether
symptoms are worse at particular times of the day.
– Advantages:
* Inexpensive;
* Readily available;
* Quickly administered;
* Require little staff training;
* Place few demands on seriously ill patients.
2. Direct observation of behaviour (objective performance decrement):
– Different approaches for the objective measurement of cognitive fatigue (see article 1.2):
* Cognitive fatigue over an extended time;
* Cognitive fatigue during sustained mental effort;
* Cognitive fatigue after challenging mental exertion;
* Cognitive fatigue after challenging physical exertion.
– Advantage -> Provides objectively verifiable data.

➢ The lack of correlation between direct measurement of performance decline and subject reporting of fatigue is a concern ->
BUT, it is not proof of the superiority of objective performance-based measures.
➢ Self-reported measures may reflect a greater effort required to maintain a given level of performance.

Fatigue and neuropsychology -> Reasonable evidence that cognitive fatigue is related to reduced cognitive performance in healthy
individuals.
➢ Assumption -> Detrimental influence of fatigue on neuropsychological performance.
➢ Recommendations to minimize the effect of fatigue on neuropsychological performance during assessment:
– Shortening test sessions;
– Giving difficult tests early in a session;

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