Neuropsychological Report for Mr. W
CLINICAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY REPORT
Patient’s Name: Mr. W Date of Evaluation: 10/10/2014
Date of Birth: 10/02/24 Age: 90 Handedness: Right
Education: 6 years Occupation: City worker (retired)
Current Medications: Donepezil 5 mg/day, Simvastatin 40 mg/day, Levothyroxin 1.25 mg/day, Losartan 50 mg/day, Warfarin 3 mg/day, Advair Inhaler, Ventolin Inhaler, Alendroate Sodium 35 mg/week, Vitamins B12 and D3
Evaluation Completed by: Dr. K., Ph.D.
Evaluation Time: One hour diagnostic interview (90791); One hour test administration, scoring, interpretation and report (96118 x 3)
REASON FOR REFERRAL: Attorney Mr. X referred Mr. W for an evaluation of his decision-making capacity.
HISTORY OF CURRENT SYMPTOMS: The symptom description and history were obtained from an interview with Mr. W, his sister, and his cousin. Mr. W stated he was seen by a physician in Michigan last year at his son’s urging and was diagnosed with “dementia.” Subsequently, according to the patient, his son reportedly took control of his finances, has withdrawn approximately $28,000 from the patient’s account, and has sold the patient’s coin collection. Mr. W does not feel the diagnosis of dementia is correct and would like to resume control over his financial matters.
Reportedly, the incident that initiated the diagnosis of dementia occurred in 2011 when Mr. W was living with his son Anthony. He stated he saw the silhouette of a person walking in another room in the house and believed it was the “Boogie Man.” Several days later, he had what appeared to be a syncopal episode (“I blacked out”) and fell while walking out to the garage. He stated he felt someone “pounding my head and pulling me down the stairs,” and he believed this was also the “Boogie Man”. He was reportedly taken to the ER and released; however, after this incident the patient stated his sons became concerned with his thinking, and this eventually led to an evaluation with a physician and a diagnosis of dementia.
Mr. W denied any other instances or auditory or visual hallucinations beyond those described above. He was living in A State (initially with his family and then on his own), but in 20XX, moved to Another State to live with his sister and brother-in-law. According to his sister and his cousin, the patient has not demonstrated any problems with memory or other areas of thinking. He stopped driving two years ago at the insistence of his son, but he remains independent in other activities of daily living, including managing his own medications, self-care, and occasional household chores. He also enjoys playing cards and playing electronic poker, and there has been no reported decline in his ability in these areas.
Summary of Previous Investigations and Findings: No previous neuropsychological evaluations.
PAST MEDICAL, NEUROLOGICAL, PSYCHIATRIC, SUBSTANCE USE HISTORY: (Inclusive review of symptoms and disorders; only positive features listed) Hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, hypothyroidism, COPD, asthma, myocardial infarction in the past (exact date unknown), and osteoporosis. The patient denied any neurological or psychiatric history beyond that described above. He does not drink alcohol and quit smoking in 1940. He has no history of recreational drug use.
BIRTH, DEVELOPMENTAL, OCCUPATIONAL HISTORY: (Review of perinatal factors, early childhood development and milestones, academic history and achievement, employment) No reported delays in reaching developmental milestones. The patient stated he completed 6 years of formal education and worked for the city in the sewer division for many years.
FAMILY HISTORY: (First degree relatives; only pertinent features reported) The patient’s mother reportedly died of a stroke at age 57, and the patient’s father died in an accident when the patient was 14.
The patient has one full brother, age 81, who is reportedly in good health, and one half-brother with whom
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he does not have regular contact. The patient has five children (three sons and two daughters), but he and his wife did not live together consistently at the time the children were born, so he stated he is not sure he is the biological father of his three oldest children. He reported he currently has no ongoing contact with any of his children.
PSYCHOSOCIAL HISTORY AND CURRENT ADAPTATION: (Current living situation, social
relationships, activities of daily living) The patient lived in A State most of his life, but moved to Another State to be closer to his children about a year ago. He was living with his son and then Another Son until
20XX when he moved into an independent apartment. He lived alone for one year before he moved to Another State to live with his sister and brother-in-law due to his ongoing conflicts with his son regarding financial issues.
CURRENT EXAMINATION: Review of records; Clinical Interview; Cognitive Assessment: Wechsler Test of Adult Reading (WTAR); Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-IV (WAIS-IV) (partial); Attention Tests: WAIS-IV Digit Span, Trail Making Tests, RBANS Coding, RBANS Semantic Fluency; Language Tests:
RBANS Naming Test; Visuospatial Tests: RBANS Figure Copy and Line Orientation, Target cancellation; Learning/Memory Tests: RBANS Word List, Story and Figure recall; Reasoning/Abstraction: WAIS-IV Similarities
BEHAVIORAL OBSERVATIONS:
The patient arrived on time for his appointment and was accompanied by his sister and his cousin. He was casually dressed and neatly groomed, and his social interpersonal skills were preserved. He was very pleasant and put forth good effort throughout the evaluation. Thought processes were logical and goal directed, and there was no indication of hallucinations, delusions, or other psychoses. No overt behavioral indications of a mood disturbance were observed, and a full range of affect was demonstrated.
The results of this evaluation are considered reliable and valid for interpretation.
SUMMARY OF FINDINGS:
Based on his educational history (6th grade) and performance on the WTAR (est. FSIQ = 68) the patient’s estimated level of premorbid functioning would be within the low-average to borderline range overall. The remainder of the examination was interpreted with the expectation of performance at this level.
The patient was fully oriented with the exception of the city, which he did not know. He was able to give detailed information (e.g., specific dates) of his autobiographical history, and his performance on formal memory testing did not indicate any type of retentive memory disturbance. Although he had slight difficulty encoding new information, there was no loss of information over time.
The patient’s speech was fluent with normal articulation, and rate and comprehension of auditory information was intact. No significant impairments were noted in naming, reading, or writing. Visuospatial abilities were an area of relative weakness, but there was no indication of hemispatial neglect or inattention, and object recognition was preserved. It is likely his poor performance on the RBANS Figure Copy and Line Orientation was due to difficulties in higher level visuospatial processing and executive functions. Abstract verbal reasoning was within normal parameters.
Immediate attention span was intact, and he performed within normal limits on most tests of sustained attention. His score on the RBANS coding subtest, which also has a visuospatial and motor component, was the only area that was below expectation.
TESTING SUMMARY:
09/10/2011
Normative data
Current Level*
PREMORBID FUNCTIONING
WTAR
10/50
SS = 68
Borderline/Low
DEMENTIA SCREENING
MMSE
25/30
—
Within Normal Limits
ATTENTION
WAIS-IV Digit Span
5 F, 5 B
ss = 9
Average
RBANS Coding
20/89
ss = 4
Borderline/Low
Trail Making Test Part A
49”
T = 53
Average
Trail Making Test Part B
115”
T = 62
High Average
LANGUAGE
RBANS Naming
10/10
>75th%
High Average
RBANS Semantic Fluency
16 words/min
ss = 9
Average
VISUOSPATIAL
RBANS Figure Copy
10/20
ss = 2
Extremely Low
RBANS Line Orientation
4/20
<2nd%
Extremely Low
MEMORY
RBANS Word List
Learning Trials
17/40
ss = 6
Low Average
Delayed Recall
0/10
3-9th%
Borderline
Recognition
19/20
26-50th
Average
RBANS Story
Learning Trials
8/24
ss = 4
Borderline/Low
Delayed Recall
6/12
ss = 8
Average
RBANS Figure Recall
6/20
ss = 6
Low Average
EXECUTIVE FUNCTIONS
WAIS-IV Similarities
—
ss = 5
Borderline
REPEATABLE BATTERY FOR THE ASSESSMENT OF NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL STATUS*:
Index Scores
Mean = 100; std = 15
Current Level
Immediate Memory
SS = 78
Borderline
Visuospatial/Constructions
SS = 53
Extremely Low
Language
SS = 99
Average
Attention
SS = 68
Borderline/Low
Delayed Memory
SS = 90
Average
*80-89 year-old norms used because 90 year-old-norms are not available
SUMMARY AND IMPRESSION:
Neurocognitive Profile: The profile on testing is one of mild weaknesses in some aspects of complex attention/working memory and executive functions within the context of an overall low average to borderline level of general intellectual functioning. Although his primary visuospatial abilities are intact, he demonstrated a weakness on more complex visuospatial processing, most likely due to the executive aspects of these tasks. He had some difficulty initially encoding lengthy (e.g., story) information, but delayed recall and recognition were generally intact, and there is no indication of a primary retentive memory disturbance. The patient did not endorse any symptoms consistent with a mood disturbance and there was no indication of hallucinations, delusions, or other psychoses observed during the interview and examination.
Diagnostic Formulation: The profile on testing is consistent with a mild dysfunction in frontal networks. In this case, the differential diagnosis is extensive and includes potential cerebrovascular disease (given his risk factors and history of at least one syncopal episode) and toxic/metabolic abnormalities (e.g., thyroid abnormalities). The etiology of his syncopal episode and confusion is impossible to determine in the absence of medical records from that time, but his hallucinations during that time are consistent with his religious and spiritual beliefs. In addition, there have been no further instances or evidence of hallucinations or other psychoses to suggest this is an ongoing/active problem. Although the possibility can never be fully excluded in this age group, the absence of retentive memory impairment argues strongly against the likelihood that Alzheimer’s disease is the primary, or a significant cause of, his current cognitive symptoms.
RECOMMENDATIONS:
Mr. W’s cognitive weaknesses are not sufficient to render him incapable of making his own decisions regarding his finances and/or health care, and therefore, guardianship is not appropriate.
Mr. W should continue to refrain from operating a motor vehicle or engaging in any potentially dangerous activities (such as the use of heat generating appliances or power tools) due to his visuospatial and attentional weaknesses.
Mr. W was encouraged to follow-up with his primary care physician to a) ensure that all treatable
causes of cognitive impairment are well-controlled (e.g., thyroid, blood pressure, diabetes, etc.), and b) review and update his medications. He may also want to discuss with his doctor whether a neurological work-up (including some form of brain imaging) would be helpful to further clarify the etiology of his current cognitive symptoms
A follow-up evaluation can be conducted in the future if there is evidence of symptom change or progression.
__________________________, Ph.D., ABPP-CN
Board Certified Neuropsychologist
Licensed Clinical Psychologist
cc: Mr. X, Attorney at Law
Dr. Diaz
Mr. W
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