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The following was taken from _The Archives of Neurology_

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Abstracts - August 1997
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Cognitive Functions in Major Depression and Parkinson Disease

Gabriela Kuzis, PhD; Liliana Sabe, PhD; Cecilia Tiberti, PhD; Ram=F3n
Leiguarda, MD; Sergio E. Starkstein, MD, PhD

Objective: To investigate the importance of major depression in the
production of cognitive deficits in patients with Parkinson disease (PD).

Design: A comprehensive neuropsychological and psychiatric assessment was
conducted in 19 patients with PD and major depression, 31 patients with PD
without depression, 27 patients with major depression but without PD, and
12 age-comparable healthy controls.

Setting: Outpatient clinic.

Results: Patients with major depression (with or without PD) had
significantly more severe cognitive deficits than both healthy controls and
patients with PD without depression on tests of verbal fluency and auditory
attention, while patients with PD and major depression had significantly
more severe deficits on tasks of abstract reasoning and set alternation
compared with the other 3 groups.

Conclusions: Major depression in patients with PD is associated with
significant deficits on specific cognitive tasks. While some of these
deficits may be explained by the presence of major depression, frontal
lobe=96related cognitive impairments may result from an interaction between
neuropathologic factors in PD and the mechanism of major depression.

Arch Neurol. 1997;54:982-986

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  Sid Roberts   67/dx3
  [log in to unmask]       Youngstown, Ohio=20