Monday, August 10, 2009

Alzheimer's Patients have difficulty perceiving certain kinds of visual contrast

Memory loss in Alzheimer's disease conceals dramatic changes to vision which may make people seem less mentally competent than they actually are.

Researchers are now testing whether they could improve the lives of people with Alzheimer's by helping them see better, using low-tech interventions such as colored dinner plates, oversize change purses, and special bingo cards. The scientists believe that small changes, such as making sure patients can see a light switch or the edge of a stair, could have important consequences for their independence and quality of life.

Researchers from Dr Alice Cronin-Golomb's lab at Boston University have discovered that Alzheimer's patients have difficulty picking up on certain kinds of visual contrast. Unfortunately, the vision loss does not show up on a typical eye exam. So the problem may be blamed on memory, when it really is eyesight. A new rule of thumb may be that if you want a person with Alzheimer's to be able to see something, use bold contrasting colors.

One of the BU group’s collaborators, Grover C. Gilmore, dean of the Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences at Case Western Reserve University, has found that healthy adults were able to identify letters faster than Alzheimer’s patients. Normally, such a delay might be chalked up to memory problems. But when he increased the visual contrast, he found that the difference between the two groups disappeared.


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