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Dive into the research topics where Rémi W. Bouchard is active.

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Featured researches published by Rémi W. Bouchard.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1990

Tetrahydroaminoacridine-lecithin combination treatment in patients with intermediate-stage Alzheimer's disease. Results of a Canadian double-blind, crossover, multicenter study.

Serge Gauthier; Rémi W. Bouchard; Albert Lamontagne; Peter L. Bailey; Howard Bergman; Jack T. Ratner; Yoseph Tesfaye; Monique Saint-Martin; Yves Bacher; Louise Carrier; Roland Charbonneau; A. Mark Clarfield; Brian Collier; Dolly Dastoor; Louise Gauthier; Marcel Germain; Catherine Kissel; Monique Krieger; Seymour L. Kushnir; Hélène Masson; Jacques Morin; Vasavan Nair; Leonard Neirinck; Samy Suissa

We studied the efficacy and safety of oral tetrahydroaminoacridine (THA) combined with lecithin in 52 patients with Alzheimers disease. The maximal tolerated dose of THA (up to 100 mg per day) was determined during an eight-week titration period, after which the tolerated dose of THA or placebo was given during two sequential randomized periods of treatment lasting eight weeks each. Highly purified lecithin (4.7 g per day) was administered during all phases of the study. Efficacy was expressed in terms of scores on the Mini-Mental State (MMS) test, the modified MMS test, the Hierarchic Dementia Scale, the Rapid Disability Rating Scale-II, and the behavioral scale of Reisberg et al. Safety was assessed by careful clinical monitoring as well as serial measurements of liver aminotransferases. Forty-six patients completed the titration period, and 39 completed the double-blind period, during which only the MMS score showed a small but significant increase (P less than 0.05) after four weeks of treatment with THA. Autonomic side effects of THA were common but mild. Reversible elevations of serum aspartate and alanine aminotransferase levels to three or more times the upper limit of normal occurred in 17 percent of patients; most of the patients affected were women. A liver biopsy performed in one patient showed resolving focal liver-cell necrosis. These studies fail to demonstrate a significant clinical benefit of THA given orally in a maximal dose of 100 mg per day over a period of eight weeks in combination with lecithin.


Neuroepidemiology | 2003

A canadian cohort study of cognitive impairment and related dementias (ACCORD): Study methods and baseline results

Howard Feldman; A.R. Levy; G.-Y. Hsiung; Kevin R. Peters; Alan Donald; Sandra E. Black; Rémi W. Bouchard; Serge Gauthier; D.A. Guzman; David B. Hogan; Andrew Kertesz; Kenneth Rockwood

The overall objective of the Canadian Collaborative Cohort of Related Dementias (ACCORD) study is to describe the diagnostic distribution, natural history and treatment outcomes of individuals referred from the community to dementia clinics in Canada. Between 1997 and 1999, an inception cohort of 1,136 subjects entered into this longitudinal study. At the baseline assessment, 10.9% of the subjects were classified as ‘not cognitively impaired’ (NCI), 30.1% as ‘cognitively impaired not demented’ (CIND), and 59% as demented. A subclassification of CIND included amnestic 25.1%, vascular cognitive impairment 18.1%, psychiatric 17.2%, neurologic 7.3%, medical/toxic metabolic 3.5%, mixed 7.6% and not specified 19.0%. The percentage of the cohort referred with dementia increased progressively each decade, while the proportions of CIND and NCI decreased. Within the dementia group, Alzheimer’s disease accounted for 47.2% of the subjects, mixed dementias 33.7%, vascular dementia 8.7%, frontotemporal degenerations 5.4%, dementia with Lewy bodies 2.5%, and unclassifiable 1.8%. The ACCORD cohort will allow a detailed study of the longitudinal course of CIND, and the longer-term outcomes of both treated and untreated dementia subjects.


Brain Research | 2004

Similar 1H magnetic resonance spectroscopic metabolic pattern in the medial temporal lobes of patients with mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer disease.

Sophie Chantal; Claude M. J. Braun; Rémi W. Bouchard; Martin Labelle; Yvan Boulanger

Structures of the medial temporal lobes are recognized to play a central role in memory processing and to be the primary sites of deterioration in Alzheimer disease (AD). Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) represents potentially an intermediate state between normal aging and AD. Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) was used to examine brain metabolic changes in patients with AD and MCI in the medial temporal lobes (MTLs), parietotemporal cortices (PTCs) and prefrontal cortices (PFCs). Fourteen patients with MCI, 14 patients with mild AD and 14 age- and sex-matched control subjects were studied. Patients with AD and MCI demonstrated significant reductions of NAA/H(2)O and Cho/H(2)O in the left MTL relative to control subjects. Patients with AD showed mI/H(2)O increases relative to patients with MCI and control subjects in all six regions investigated, and a statistically significant mI/H(2)O increase was measured in the right PTC. Patients with AD and MCI demonstrated the same metabolic pattern in the left MTL, suggesting a similar pathological process underlying memory impairment. Increased mI signal appears to be a neurochemical abnormality associated mostly with AD and the dementia process. Some interhemispheric metabolite asymmetries were increased in AD patients.


Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences | 2003

The Consortium to Investigate Vascular Impairment of Cognition: methods and first findings.

Kenneth Rockwood; Heather S. Davis; Chris MacKnight; Robert Vandorpe; Serge Gauthier; Antonio Guzman; Patrick R. Montgomery; Sandra E. Black; David B. Hogan; Andrew Kertesz; Rémi W. Bouchard; Howard Feldman

BACKGROUND The Consortium to Investigate Vascular Impairment of Cognition (CIVIC) is a Canadian, multi-centre, clinic-based prospective cohort study of patients with Vascular Cognitive Impairment (VCI). We report its organization and the impact of diagnostic criteria on the study of VCI. METHODS Nine memory disability clinics enrolled patients and recorded their usual investigations and care. A case report form included all vascular dementia (VaD) individual criteria for each of four sets (National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS-AIREN), Alzheimers Disease Diagnostic Treatment Centers (ADDTC), the ICD-10 Classification of Mental and Behavioural Disorders (ICD-10), and the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV)) of consensus-based diagnostic criteria and for the Hachinski Ischemia Score (HIS). Investigators, having completed the case report form, were asked to make a clinical judgement about the cognitive diagnosis based on the best available information, including neuroimaging. RESULTS Of 1,347 patients (mean age 72 years; 56% women), 846 (63%) were diagnosed with dementia and 324 (24%) were diagnosed with VCI. The proportion of patients diagnosed with VaD by the diagnostic criteria was: 23.9% (n = 322) by DSM-IV, 10.2% (n = 137) by HIS, 4.3% (n = 58) by ICD-10, 3.8% (n = 51) by ADTCC, and 3.6% (n = 48) by NINDS-AIREN. Judged against a clinical diagnosis of VaD, the sensitivity/specificity of each was: DSM-IV (0.77/0.80); HIS (0.41/0.92); ICD-10 (0.29/0.98); ADTCC (0.24/0.98); NINDS-AIREN (0.42/0.995). Compared with a clinical diagnosis of VCI, sensitivities were lower for the diagnostic criteria, reflecting the exclusion of patients who did not have dementia. CONCLUSIONS Consensus-based criteria for VaD omit patients who do not meet dementia criteria that are modeled on Alzheimers disease. Even for patients who do, the proportion identified with VaD varies widely. Criteria based on empirical analyses need to be developed and validated.


Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences | 2001

Assessment of suspected dementia

Howard Chertkow; Howard Bergman; Schipper Hm; Serge Gauthier; Rémi W. Bouchard; Fontaine S; Clarfield Am

At the Second Canadian Consensus Conference on Dementia (CCCD) (February, 1998), a group of neurologists, geriatricians, and psychiatrists met to consider guidelines for evaluation of dementia in Canada. This review paper formed a background paper for their discussion of dementia diagnosis. These experts from across the country concluded that diagnosis of suspected dementia cases continued to rest on skilled clinical assessment. Mental status exam, preferably in some quantifiable form, has become an essential part of the assessment. Selected laboratory tests are advisable in all cases (CBC, TSH, electrolytes, calcium, and glucose), but the CCCD continued to advise that CT scanning was mandatory only in selected cases where clinical findings pointed to another possibility besides Alzheimers disease. The growing list of other diagnostic measures with potential usefulness in diagnosis of Alzheimers disease or dementia in general was reviewed, but the evidence was judged as insufficient to support routine use of these tests by physicians. As new treatments for Alzheimers disease become available, neurologists face new diagnostic challenges--differentiating Mild Cognitive Impairment, Frontotemporal dementias and Mixed dementias, and Lewy Body Dementia. Guidelines to aid in differential diagnosis are presented.


Neurology | 2006

Characterizing neuropsychiatric symptoms in subjects referred to dementia clinics

Kevin R. Peters; Kenneth Rockwood; Sandra E. Black; Rémi W. Bouchard; Serge Gauthier; David B. Hogan; Andrew Kertesz; Inge Loy-English; B.L. Beattie; A. D. Sadovnick; Howard Feldman

Objective: To characterize the neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPS) of subjects classified as not cognitively impaired (NCI), cognitively impaired–not demented (CIND), and dementia. Methods: A Canadian Cohort Study of Cognitive Impairment and Related Dementias (ACCORD) is a longitudinal investigation of individuals referred to eight Canadian dementia centers for evaluation of cognitive impairment and neurobehavioral symptoms. Of the inception cohort of 804 subjects for whom the informant-based Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI) was completed at study entry, 35 were classified as NCI, 193 as CIND, and 576 as dementia. The three diagnostic groups were compared on each of the 12 NPI items. Within each diagnostic group, comparisons were also made between symptomatic (NPS+; total score > 1) and asymptomatic (NPS−; total score = 0) subjects on measures of general cognitive status and functional disability. A subset of the NCI and CIND individuals were also compared on a comprehensive neuropsychological test battery. Results: There was at least one NPI item reported in 60% of subjects with NCI, 74% with CIND, and 89% with dementia. The item scores for delusions, hallucinations, agitation, apathy, disinhibition, aberrant motor behavior, and problems with appetite were greater in dementia subjects than in NCI or CIND. There were no significant differences between subjects with NCI and CIND on any NPI item. For each diagnostic group, NPS+ subjects were more impaired on functional but not neuropsychological measures. Conclusions: Across all levels of cognition, neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPS) are an important feature in individuals referred to dementia clinics. The current data suggest that NPS may precede cognitive deficits in individuals classified as not cognitively impaired and cognitively impaired–not demented.


American Journal of Alzheimers Disease and Other Dementias | 2010

The Value of PET in Mild Cognitive Impairment, Typical and Atypical/Unclear Dementias: A Retrospective Memory Clinic Study

Robert Laforce; James P. Buteau; Nancy Paquet; Louis Verret; Michèle Houde; Rémi W. Bouchard

This retrospective study examined the role of [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) in the diagnosis of atypical/unclear dementias in a memory clinic setting. A total of 94 patients with a diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) or dementia, who had a PET study within 2 months of their diagnosis, were reevaluated at 5 and 18 months. Results showed that PET was associated with a change in diagnosis in 29% of patients and a 64% increase in the use of cholinesterase inhibitors (ChEIs). PET significantly lowered the number of atypical/unclear diagnoses from 39.4% to 16% and nearly 30% of these were found to have a typical Alzheimer’s disease (AD) pattern of hypometabolism. In conclusion, the addition of PET to the investigation of atypical/unclear cases of dementia helped generating a more accurate diagnosis and initiating earlier treatment. PET was of limited contribution to typical AD and frontotemporal dementia (FTD) cases. This study provides guiding evidence about the true value of PET imaging in the day-to-day challenge of dementia diagnosis.


Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2006

Clinical and radiographic subtypes of vascular cognitive impairment in a clinic-based cohort study

Kenneth Rockwood; Sandra E. Black; Xiaowei Song; David B. Hogan; Serge Gauthier; Chris MacKnight; Robert Vandorpe; Antonio Guzman; Patrick R. Montgomery; Andrew Kertesz; Rémi W. Bouchard; Howard Feldman

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE There is a need for empirical studies to define criteria for vascular cognitive impairment (VCI) subtypes. In this paper, we report the predictive validity of a subtype classification scheme based on clinical and radiographic features. METHODS Nine Canadian memory clinics participated in the Consortium to Investigate Vascular Impairment of Cognition. This cohort consisted of 1347 patients, of whom 324 had VCI, and was followed for up to 30 months. RESULTS Clinical and neuroimaging features defined three subtypes: vascular cognitive impairment, no dementia, (n=97), vascular dementia (n=101) and mixed neurodegenerative/vascular dementia (n=126). Any ischemic lesion on neuroimaging increased the odds (odds ratio=9.31; 95% confidence interval 6.46, 13.39) of a VCI diagnosis. No VCI subtype, however, was associated with a specific neuroimaging abnormality. Compared to those with no cognitive impairment, patients with each VCI subtype had higher rates of death and institutionalization (hazard ratio for combined adverse events=6.08, p<0.001). CONCLUSIONS Both clinical features and radiographic features help establish a diagnosis of VCI. The outcomes of VCI subtypes, however, are more strongly associated with clinical features than with radiographic ones.


Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2007

Disease progression in vascular cognitive impairment: cognitive, functional and behavioural outcomes in the Consortium to Investigate Vascular Impairment of Cognition (CIVIC) cohort study.

Kenneth Rockwood; Paige Moorhouse; Xiaowei Song; Chris MacKnight; Serge Gauthier; Andrew Kertesz; Patrick R. Montgomery; Sandra E. Black; David B. Hogan; Antonio Guzman; Rémi W. Bouchard; Howard Feldman

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Empirical studies to clarify the outcomes in Vascular Cognitive Impairment (VCI) are needed. We compared cognitive, functional, and behavioural outcomes in patients with VCI to patients with no cognitive impairment (NCI), and Alzheimers disease (AD). METHODS Secondary analysis of the Consortium to Investigate Vascular Impairment of Cognition (CIVIC), a multi-centre Canadian memory clinic 30-month cohort study. RESULTS Of 1347 patients, 938 were eligible for follow-up, of whom 239 (24.5%) were lost and 29 (3%) had died. Of the remaining 697 patients, 125 had NCI, 229 had VCI, and 343 had AD at baseline. Compared to people with NCI, of whom 20-40% showed progression based on cognitive and functional measures, those with VCI were more likely to progress (50-65%), as were people with AD (50-80%) (p<0.01). More people with VCI showed progression of affective symptoms (30%) than those with NCI (12%) or AD (15% p<0.01). Progression of impaired judgment (rated clinically) in VCI (15%) was similar to AD (11%) but more common than in NCI (4%, p<0.01). CONCLUSIONS Most people with VCI show readily detectable progression by 30 months. Depressive symptoms were more common and more progressive in VCI than in Alzheimers disease, whereas clinical evidence of progressive executive dysfunction was common in both AD and VCI.


Dementia and Geriatric Cognitive Disorders | 2008

Transition from Cognitively Impaired Not Demented to Alzheimer's Disease: An Analysis of Changes in Functional Abilities in a Dementia Clinic Cohort

Ging-Yuek Robin Hsiung; Sina Alipour; Claudia Jacova; Jacob Grand; Serge Gauthier; Sandra E. Black; Rémi W. Bouchard; Andrew Kertesz; Inge Loy-English; David B. Hogan; Kenneth Rockwood; Howard Feldman

Background: Patients with cognitive impairment no dementia (CIND) are at an increased risk of progression to Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Whether subtle impairments in functional or social abilities at the CIND stage can predict progression to AD is not yet fully determined. We evaluated whether impairments on the Disability Assessment for Dementia (DAD) and Functional Rating Scale (FRS) can predict progression to AD. Methods: We examined 70 patients with CIND from the ACCORD cohort having complete DAD and FRS baseline and 2-year follow-up data. MANCOVA adjusted for age, sex, education and baseline MMSE score compared the baseline and 2-year change in DAD and FRS scores in CIND patients who progressed to AD versus non-progressors. Results: There were no significant differences between CIND progressors and non-progressors in baseline total DAD or FRS scores. FRS domain analysis revealed that greater impairment in social/occupational functioning significantly predicted progression, while there were no predictive DAD domains. In progressors, both DAD and FRS scores significantly declined over time with the largest changes in instrumental activities of daily living (IADL). Conclusion: While changes in IADL characterize the progression from CIND to AD, impairment in complex social-cognitive competency significantly predicts risk of progression and may mark early AD.

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Andrew Kertesz

University of Western Ontario

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