RT Journal A1 Chapman LL, White DA, Storandt M T1 Prose recall in dementia: A comparison of delay intervals JF Archives of Neurology JO Archives of Neurology YR 1997 FD December 1 VO 54 IS 12 SP 1501 OP 1504 DO 10.1001/archneur.1997.00550240053012 UL http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/archneur.1997.00550240053012 AB Objective:  To explore one methodological variation, delay length, that may contribute to contradictory findings in the literature regarding the use of delayed recall in the detection of early-stage dementia of the Alzheimer type.Design:  Comparison of participants with dementia and without dementia on a prose recall task at both 10- and 30-minute delay intervals.Setting:  Washington University Alzheimer's Disease Research Center, St Louis, Mo.Participants:  Participants with very mild dementia of the Alzheimer type (n=136) and uncompromised elderly individuals (n=197).Main Outcome Measures:  Results of the Logical Memory subtest from the Wechsler Memory Scale with immediate recall and 10- and 30-minute delayed recall.Results:  Participants with dementia recalled significantly less material than elderly controls at both immediate and delayed recall (P<.001). Multiple regression analyses revealed that dementia classification failed to account for additional variance in the 30-minute delayed score beyond that which could be accounted for by the immediate score. A small but significant proportion of variance was accounted for in the 10-minute delayed score beyond that which could be accounted for by the immediate recall score.Conclusion:  Delayed recall of a prose passage does not appear to enhance the differentiation of very mild dementia of the Alzheimer type from normal aging in a meaningful way, whether the recall delay is 10 or 30 minutes.