Recent studies suggest that onset of dementia in Parkinson's disease (PD) is preceded by a phase known as mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Different clinical subtypes of MCI in PD were found. The objective of this study was to investigate whether patients with PD diagnosed with amnestic MCI (aPD-MCI) have also subtle deficits in other cognitive domains and especially in attention/executive functions and, therefore to clarify whether all subcomponents of executive control are equally affected in aPD-MCI. We investigated 23 patients with aPD-MCI (modified Petersen's criteria) and 25 normal controls. Relative to controls, the aPD-MCI group showed significant deficits with reference to tasks that encompass various aspects of attention/executive functions, including Trail Making Test, Stroop test, Modified Card Sorting Test, and digit span backward, as well as phonemic and semantic verbal fluency. This suggests that executive dysfunction is consistently presented in PD with MCI, even in ''amnestic'' PD-MCI due to cortical-subcortical dysfunction.
In the present work we found that faster progression to the mild DLB stage in the first few years of the disease is mainly related to deterioration of memory, attention/executive functions, and visuospatial abilities, as well as an increased frequency of visual hallucinations.
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