Differential effects of the factor structure of the Wechsler Memory Scale-Revised on the cortical thickness and complexity of patients aged over 75 years in a memory clinic setting

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Abstract

The Wechsler Memory Scale-Revised (WMS-R) is one of the internationally well-known batteries for memory assessment in a general memory clinic setting. Several factor structures of the WMS-R for patients aged under 74 have been proposed. However, little is known about the factor structure of the WMS-R for patients aged over 75 years and its neurological significance. Thus, we conducted exploratory factor analysis to determine the factor structure of the WMS-R for patients aged over 75 years in a memory clinic setting. Regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) was calculated from single-photon emission computed tomography data. Cortical thickness and cortical fractal dimension, as the marker of cortical complexity, were calculated from high resolution magnetic resonance imaging data. We found that the four factors appeared to be the most appropriate solution to the model, including recognition memory, paired associate memory, visual-and-working memory, and attention as factors. Patients with mild cognitive impairments showed significantly higher factor scores for paired associate memory, visual-and-working memory, and attention than patients with Alzheimer's disease. Regarding the neuroimaging data, the factor scores for paired associate memory positively correlated with rCBF in the left pericallosal and hippocampal regions. Moreover, the factor score for paired associate memory showed most robust correlations with the cortical thickness in the limbic system, whereas the factor score for attention correlated with the cortical thickness in the bilateral precuneus. Furthermore, each factor score correlated with the cortical fractal dimension in the bilateral frontotemporal regions. Interestingly, the factor scores for the visual-and-working memory and attention selectively correlated with the cortical fractal dimension in the right posterior cingulate cortex and right precuneus cortex, respectively. These findings demonstrate that recognition memory, paired associate memory, visual-and-working memory, and attention can be crucial factors for interpreting the WMS-R results of elderly patients aged over 75 years in a memory clinic setting. Considering these findings, the results of WMS-R in elderly patients aged over 75 years in a memory clinic setting should be cautiously interpreted.

Figures

  • TABLE 1 | Inter-Correlation Matrix for the WMS-R Subtests.
  • TABLE 2 | Total variance explained by different components.
  • TABLE 3 | Four-Factor Promax Solution for WMS-R.
  • TABLE 4 | Correlation analyses between the factor scores and rCBF.
  • FIGURE 1 | Brain regions with a positive correlation between cortical thickness and factor scores. Significant regions are identified by surface-based morphometry, which were projected onto the left and right lateral surfaces of the standard inflated brain. Medial sections are also shown. The threshold was set at p < 0.05 (TFCE-corrected permutation test). See Table 5 for the details of the regions. L, left.
  • TABLE 5 | Cortical thickness correlated with each factor score.
  • FIGURE 2 | Brain regions with a positive correlation between cortical fractal detention and factor scores. The threshold was set at p < 0.05 (TFCE-corrected permutation test). See Table 6 for the details of the regions. L, left.
  • TABLE 6 | Cortical fractal dimension correlated with each factor score.

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Kinno, R., Shiromaru, A., Mori, Y., Futamura, A., Kuroda, T., Yano, S., … Ono, K. (2017). Differential effects of the factor structure of the Wechsler Memory Scale-Revised on the cortical thickness and complexity of patients aged over 75 years in a memory clinic setting. Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience, 9(DEC). https://doi.org/10.3389/fnagi.2017.00405

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