Unit 5 - Dementia and Delirium Flashcards

1
Q

How can we distinguish the symptoms of cognitive impairments between dementia, delirium, and depression? (5)

A
  • onset
  • course (how long it lasts)
  • Consciousness
  • orientation
  • thinking
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2
Q

What is the onset of dementia?

A
  • onset of cognitive impairment is gradual and/or insidious
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3
Q

What are the common types of dementia in the older adult? (5)

A
  • alzheimer’s type
  • Vascular dementia
  • Lewy body dementia
  • fronto-temporal
  • mixed
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4
Q

Why does vascular dementia occur?

A
  • small areas in brain where blood flow is not as good
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5
Q

What does lewy-body dementia cause?

A
  • hallucinations
    visual or auditory
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6
Q

What is fronto-temporal dementia? (3)

A
  • younger in 50s
  • assumes depression
  • uninterested in social interaction
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7
Q

What is the prevalence of Alzheimer’s disease (AD)? (8)

A
  • 60-80% of dementia is AD
  • Prevalence increases with age
  • 1% of Canadians have dementia
  • early onset (30-60) represents 5% of the cases of AD
  • 25% are 85+
  • Women are more likely to have dementia than men
  • Higher proportion of First Nations people and younger age onset dementia
  • Indigenous men are more likely than women
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8
Q

What is Alzheimer’s disease?

A
  • disease of the brain with a gradual onset
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9
Q

What are the signs of Alzheimer’s? (4)

A
  • no changes in consciousness
  • Depression (mood signs) can occur up to 3 years prior to diagnosis
  • memory loss, including orientation, word finding problems, vision or spatial issues, impaired judgment, difficulty managing day to day
  • change in judgment, reasoning, behaviour, and emotion
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10
Q

How long and what is the severity of Alzheimer’s?

A
  • course can be from 1-20 years (usually 8-9 years)
  • irreversible or chronic and progressive
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11
Q

How do we diagnose AD? (4)

A
  • confirmation based on postmortem brain brain biopsy
  • interview with older adult and with their family or close others
  • history of gradual deterioration of cognitive function (screening tests)
  • Rule out other causes (neuroimaging to rule out malignancy)
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12
Q

What are the risk factors of AD? (3)

A
  • vascular disorders
  • obesity, dyslipidemia, hypertension, smoking, stroke
  • head trauma
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13
Q

What are the protective factors of AD? (4)

A
  • higher education
  • brain training
  • regular exercise
  • socially integrated lifestyle
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14
Q

What are the components of cognitive assessments for AD? (6)

A

LOC - normal
Memory - difficulty remembering names and recent events, disorientation in later stages
Language - difficulty expressing self
Visual spatial cognition - Where the person is in space
Attention -
Abstract reasoning - impaired reasoning, language

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15
Q

What are the later symptoms of Alzheimer’s? (3)

A
  • difficulty walking and swallowing
  • expect decline first in executive function, then decline in IADLs, then decline in ADLs
  • maintain social abilities through different stages
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