Lin Kn
National Yang-Ming University
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Psychological Medicine | 1997
Chun-Chu Liu; Shuu-Jiun Wang; Evelyn L. Teng; Jong-Ling Fuh; Chun-Jen Lin; Lin Kn; Hsi-Ming Chen; Chih-Yuan Lin; P.N. Wang; Yong-Yi Yang; Eric B. Larson; Pesus Chou; H. C. Liu
BACKGROUND Two recent surveys of depression among Chinese elderly people sampled different populations, used different case ascertainment methods and resulted in a seven-fold difference in prevalence rates. The present study was conducted to compare prevalence rates obtained with two commonly used methods in the same population, and to examine the risk factors for depression. METHODS The target population included all residents aged 65 years and over in a rural Chinese community. Participants were interviewed for demographic and medical information, examined by a neurologist and administered Chinese versions of the Geriatric Depression Scale-Short Form (GDS-S), the Cognitive Abilities Screening Instrument (CASI) and an Activities of Daily Living (ADL) form. Individuals who screened positive on the GDS-S were also interviewed by a psychiatrist for diagnosis according to the DSM-III-R criteria. RESULTS Among the 1313 participants, 26% screened positive on the GDS-S and 13% were diagnosed as having a depressive disorder, including 6.1% with major depression. Individuals with depressive disorders were more likely to have poor ADL scores, lower CASI scores, and chronic physical illnesses. They were also more likely to be female, older, illiterate and without a spouse, but adding these variables did not increase the overall association with the GDS-S score. CONCLUSIONS Depression was quite common in this Chinese rural geriatric population. The prevalence rate was twice as high when judged by depression symptomatology rather than clinical diagnosis. The critical risk factors were functional impairments, poor cognitive abilities and the presence of chronic physical illnesses.
Neurology | 2000
Lin Kn; Evelyn L. Teng; P.N. Wang; Y.Y. Chuang; Chiung Mei Chen; Chun-Chu Liu; H. C. Liu
Complaints of poor memory are common among older individuals, but their clinical significance remains unclear. We compared patients’ self-report of poor memory with their caregivers’ report, and to compare the two reports’ associations with the patients’ dementia status and tested cognitive performance. Participants included 709 patients at the Memory Clinic of the Taipei Veterans General Hospital and their primary caregivers. A total of 493 of the patients were diagnosed with dementia according to the criteria of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th ed. (DSM-IV),1 including 78% with probable AD, 15% with vascular dementia, and 7% with mixed or other types of dementia. The diagnosis of dementia and its subtypes was made by a neurologist based on interview, physical examination, cognitive test, and laboratory findings. Each patient and caregiver was asked separately by a neuropsychologist to describe the patient’s memory as being good/average or poor. They also answered questions for the …
Nuclear Medicine Communications | 1992
Ren-Shyan Liu; Lin Kn; Sun-Sang Wang; Din-E Shan; Jong-Ling Fuh; Yeh Sh; H. C. Liu
99Tcm-hexamethylpropyleneamine oxime (HMPAO) single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) of brain was performed in 43 unselected patients with Parkinsons disease to evaluate whether low cerebral perfusion on SPECT correlated with cognitive impairment in the patients. All patients received neurological, Mini-Mental State Examination and a neuropsychological assessment. Eighteen (41.9%) of the 43 patients were demented. Thirty patients (69.8%) had abnormal SPECT: 17 had perfusion defects in cortical regions, eight in basal ganglia and five in both regions. Of the 22 patients with abnormal cortical perfusion, 15 (68.2%) were demented; only three (14.3%) of the 21 patients without cortical defect were demented (P < 0.01). Twelve of the 15 demented patients had low perfusion in the parietal region alone or in parietal and occipital regions. The cortical perfusion defects, present in 22 (51.2%) Parkinsons patients, are highly correlated with cognitive impairment. The pattern of SPECT abnormality in most demented patients with Parkinsons disease is similar to that seen in Alzheimers disease, suggesting that the underlying pathophysiology for dementia in patients with Parkinsons disease may be similar to that in Alzheimers disease.
Neuroepidemiology | 1997
Hsiu-Chih Liu; Shuu-Jiun Wang; Jong-Ling Fuh; Chia-Yia Liu; Lin Kn; Cheng-Huai Lin; Pei-Ning Wang; Ker-Neng Lin; Hsiao-Chien Wang; Hsi-Ming Chen; Ray Chang; Eric B. Larson; Wu Gs; Pesus Chou; Evelyn L. Teng
We conducted an epidemiological study of several neurological disorders among the Chinese aged 50 years or older on the islet of Kinmen. All participants were interviewed and examined by neurologists. From the targeted population of 5,061 individuals, 3,915 (77.4%) of them completed the evaluations. Among the 4,087 individuals with whom face-to-face contact was made, the refusal rate was 4.2%. The disorders of interest were dementia, Parkinsons disease, essential tremor, stroke, transient ischemic attacks, and migraine. Among the 3,915 participants, 366 cases were found with 1 or more of the surveyed neurological disorders on the prevalence day, August 1, 1993, yielding a prevalence of 93.5/1,000. The purpose of this study, the general methodology, and some overall findings are presented in this communication in order to provide a common background for detailed findings on each disorder to be reported separately.
Neuroepidemiology | 1994
Sun-Sang Wang; Jong-Ling Fuh; Chun-Chu Liu; Lin Kp; Ray Chang; J.S. Yih; Pesus Chou; Lin Kn; Evelyn L. Teng; Eric B. Larson; Amy Borenstein Graves; H. C. Liu
A door-to-door survey by neurologists in Kin-Hu township, Republic of China, of a sample of the Chinese population of 683 persons aged 50 years and over was performed in August, 1992. A total of 482 subjects (70.6%) completed the study. Kin-Hu, a township of Kinmen, is predominantly rural with agriculture as the main occupation. Six subjects (5 men, 1 woman) were diagnosed with Parkinsons disease (PD). Of these six, five were newly diagnosed; one of the five also had dementia. The crude prevalence rate per 1,000 persons over 50 years of age of PD in Kin-Hu was 6.2. The age-specific prevalence rates per 1,000 persons (95% confidence intervals) were 0 for age 50-59, 7.8 (0-22.9) for age 60-69, 17.5 (5.2-29.8) for age 70-79, and 25.4 (10.9-39.9) for age > or = 80. These rates are considerably higher than those reported in the Peoples Republic of China, and similar to rates found in Western countries. The higher prevalence of PD found in this pilot study suggests that environmental factors may be more important than racial factors in the pathogenesis of PD. If confirmed, the results suggest that epidemiologic studies looking for environmental risk factors might be of value.
Nuclear Medicine Communications | 1992
H. C. Liu; Ren-Shyan Liu; Lin Kn; Sun-Sang Wang; Jong-Ling Fuh; Yeh Sh; Benjamin N. Chiang
Brain single photon emission computed tomography (SPET) using 99mTcm-hexamethylpropyleneamine oxime (HMPAO) was performed in 37 patients satisfying the standard clinical criteria of Alzheimers disease (AD), correlating results with patients age of onset, duration of illness, severity of dementia, neuropsychological impairment, computed tomography (CT) and EEG findings. All patients had abnormal SPET: 23 were bilaterally symmetric, 10 were bilaterally asymmetric and four showed unilateral low regional cerebral perfusion. Low perfusion in bilateral parietal regions was the most consistent finding and was present alone or with other abnormal regions in 31 patients (84%). The only significant clinical correlation was found between asymmetric SPET changes and onset of disease before the age of 65 years. Fifty per cent of patients with presenile onset, but only 19% with senile onset had asymmetric low regional cerebral perfusion. Fifteen of the 36 patients had normal brain CT scans, and 9 of 31 patients receiving EEG examination had normal results. Although clinical evaluation is the most valuable diagnostic tool, brain SPET is a sensitive test for physiological investigation in AD.
Neurology | 1995
Jong-Ling Fuh; Evelyn L. Teng; Lin Kn; Eric B. Larson; Shuu-Jiun Wang; Chun-Chu Liu; Pesus Chou; B. I. T. Kuo; H. C. Liu
Psychological Medicine | 1994
H. C. Liu; Pesus Chou; Lin Kn; Shuu-Jiun Wang; Jong-Ling Fuh; Hui-Ching Lin; Chun-Chu Liu; Wu Gs; Eric B. Larson; White Lr
Neurology | 1997
Shuu-Jiun Wang; H. C. Liu; Jong-Ling Fuh; Chun-Chu Liu; Lin Kp; Hsi-Ming Chen; Chih-Yuan Lin; P.N. Wang; Li Hsu; Hsiao-Chien Wang; Lin Kn
Physiology & Behavior | 1995
Hsiu-Chih Liu; Shuu-Jiun Wang; Lin Kn; Ker-Neng Lin; Jong-Ling Fuh; Evelyn L. Teng