dementia pathophysiology and pharmacology Flashcards

1
Q

what is dementia?

A

A disorder associated with impairment of memory, speech and language, comprehension, motor skills, judgement and orientation

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2
Q

what is the pathology of dementia characterised by?

A

cell death in areas of the brain

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3
Q

what age group are mainly affected by dementia?

A

over 65years

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4
Q

what is the most common form of dementia?

A

Alzheimer’s disease

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5
Q

what is Alzheimer’s disease?

A

an irreversible progressive disease that slowly destroys memory and thinking skills

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6
Q

what are the senile plaques found in the cerebral cortex of alzheimers patients made of?

A
  • extracellular - accumulation of insoluble fragments of beta-amyloid
  • intracellular - accumulation of hyperphosphorylated tau strands
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7
Q

what is the macro characteristic pathology of Alzheimer disease?

A

Ventricular enlargement, & hippocampal entorhinal and temporal cortex atrophy

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8
Q

what is the micro characteristic pathology of Alzheimer disease?

A

Amyloid plaques, neurofibrillary tangles, neuronal loss in the hippocampus, Locus Coerulus, and raphe nuclei

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9
Q

what is the molecular characteristic pathology of Alzheimer disease?

A

β-amyloid deposition (plaques), abnormal tau (tangles), synaptophysin (a synaptic vesicle protein) loss

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10
Q

what is the neurochemical characteristic pathology of Alzheimer disease?

A

Cortical cholinergic loss (correlates with dementia), also see loss of 5-HT, NA

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11
Q

what are β-amyloid plaques?

A

Dense deposits of protein and cellular material that accumulate outside the neurone

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12
Q

what are neurofibrillary tangles?

A

Twisted fibers that build up inside the neurone

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13
Q

what is the precursor to amyloid plaques?

A

amyloid precursor protein (APP)

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14
Q

how does APP cause plaque formation?

A
  1. APP sticks through the neuron membrane
  2. enzymes cut the APP into fragments of protein including beta-amyloid
  3. this leads to extracellular deposition of β-pleated assemblies of Aβ-peptides hence forming plaques
  4. plaques in the hippocampus and cerebral cortex inhibit neuronal activity
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15
Q

what is the role of tau

A

to stabilise the microtubules of neurones

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16
Q

what happens to tau in alzheimers disease?

A
  • it is abnormally phosphorylated and assembles into paired helical filaments.
  • this causes the microtubles to collapse and the tau proteins aggregate into neurofibrillary tangles
17
Q

what are the 2 main acetyl choline pathways?

A

nucelus basalisis to the cortex

pedunculopontine nucleus to thalamus

18
Q

what role does acetylcholine play in the nucelus basalis to the cortex pathway

A

learning and memor and is impaired in Alzheimer’s

19
Q

what role does acetyl choline play in the Pedunculopontine nucleus to thalamus pathway?

A

sleep wake and sensory filtering

20
Q

what happens to acetyl choline (ACh) in alzheimers disease (AD)?

A

atrophy of the nucleus basalis of meynert causes reduced activity of the choline acetyltransferase enzyme
resulting in reduced acetylcholine synthesis
this then causes impaired memory in AD patients

21
Q

what do we give to tackle the depletion of acetylcholine levels in AD

A

acetylcholine esterase inhbiitors

22
Q

give examples of acetycholine esterase inhibitors

A

donepezil
rivastigmine
galantamine
tacrine

23
Q

what are side effects to taking acetylcholine esterase inhibitors

A

bradycardia, GI, compliants, sleep disturbance

24
Q

why do we no longer use Tacrine as an acetylcholine esterase inhibtor

A

because of its hepatotoxicity profile

25
Q

acetylcholine esterase inhibitors don’t treat alzheimers disease. so why do we give them to patients

A

becayse they are efficacious in treating cognitive symptoms in alzheimers

26
Q

where are donepezil and galantamine metabolised

A

in the liver

27
Q

what hydrolyses rivastigmine

A

cholinesterase (which is found in the synapse of ACh neurones)

28
Q

what are the adverse effects of donepezil

A

nausea vomiting diarrhoea muscle cramps

29
Q

adverse effects of rivastigmine

A

nausea vomiting diarrhoea headache dizzy

30
Q

what are the adverse effects of galantamine

A

nausea vomit agitation sleep distrubance

31
Q

what si given as an adjunct to cholinesterase inhibitors

A

memantine which block glutamate excitotoxicit-NMDA antagonist