Abstract

Neuropsychological assessment plays a prominent role in the evaluation and care of patients with neurodegenerative diseases throughout the dynamic course of disease. As a biomarker of disease, neuropsychological measurement can distinguish normal from pathologic aging processes. Further, neuropsychological data can help distinguish and classify underlying pathologies in dementing diseases, augmenting imaging and biofluid markers in this area. Neuropsychological data can predict increased or reduced risk for dementia conferred by multiple factors, and describe disease trajectory in affected individuals. Cognitive evaluation can also estimate and address functional outcomes that are most important to patients and their loved ones and that are clinically relevant to diagnostic staging. In informing intervention and patient care needs, areas of cognitive weakness highlight targets for support/intervention, while areas of cognitive strength can be capitalized upon to modify the clinical course of disease. These functions can be accomplished through the complementary use of brief screening tools and comprehensive test batteries. However, for neuropsychological data to serve these functions, it is critical to understand neuropsychological test properties and nondisease factors that can account for variance in test performance. This chapter concludes with directions for future research.

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