The Network Structure of Cognitive Impairment: From Subjective Cognitive Decline to Alzheimer's Disease.
Giorgia TosiSalvatore NigroDaniele UrsoVittoria SpinosaValentina GnoniMarco FilardiFrancesco GiaquintoEzia RizziMarika IaiaLuigi MacchitellaYlenia ChiarelloFederico FerrariPaola AngelelliDaniele RomanoGiancarlo LogroscinoPublished in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2024)
It was proposed that a reorganization of the relationships between cognitive functions occurs in dementia, a vision that surpasses the idea of a mere decline of specific domains. The complexity of cognitive structure, as assessed by neuropsychological tests, can be captured by exploratory graph analysis (EGA). EGA was applied to the neuropsychological assessment of people (humans) with subjective cognitive decline (SCD), mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and Alzheimer's disease (AD; total N = 638). Both sexes were included. In AD, memory scores detach from the other cognitive functions, and memory subdomains reduce their reciprocal relation. SCD showed a pattern of segregated neuropsychological domains, and MCI showed a noisy and less stable pattern. Results suggest that AD drives a reorganization of cognitive functions toward a less-fractionated architecture compared with preclinical conditions. Cognitive functions show a reorganization that goes beyond the performance decline. Results also have clinical implications in test interpretations and usage.