Dementia Flashcards

1
Q

What is dementia?

A
  • A chronic and progressive deterioration of cognitive function due to organic brain disease. It is irreversible and consciousness is not impaired.
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2
Q

What are the different types of dementia’s you can have?

A
  1. Alzheimer’s disease (50%) - degeneration of the cerebral cortex, with cortical atrophy and reduction in acetylcholine production
     Degeneration of neurons in cortex
     Aetiology not completely known but associated with beta amyloid plaques (outside neuron) and Tau tangles (inside neuron)
     Over time this causes brain atrophy – gyri get narrows and sulci get wider and ventricles get larger
     Types: sporadic and familial
     Insidious onset, episodic memory loss, language impairment
  2. Vascular Dementia (25%) - Infarction of small and medium sized vessels- essentially mini strokes (strokes/TIAs)
     Neuronal death- location specific deficit- Step wise decline
     Focal, motor and gait signs
  3. Lewy Body Dementia (15%) - deposition of abnormal proteins (Lewy bodies) within the brain stem and neocortex
     Onset of cognitive impairment before Parkinsonian symptoms
     Visual hallucinations and fluctuating cognition
  4. Frontotemporal Dementia - specific degeneration of the frontal and temporal lobes
     Reduced hygiene, personality change, poor planning, aphasia
    Alzheimer’s > Vascular > Lewy Body > Frontotemporal (may coexist)
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3
Q

Summarise the epidemiology of dementia

A
  • Prevalence increases with age
  • Prevalence of 20% in patients aged > 80 yrs
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4
Q

What are the presenting symptoms of dementia?

A
  • All dementias
    o Progressive loss of memory and cognitive function
    1. Alzheimer’s disease - insidious onset
    o Starts with short term memory loss
    o Then motor skills decline
    o Then language affected
    o Then long term memory
    o Then disoriented
    2. Vascular dementia - step-wise decline
    3. Lewy Body dementia - fluctuating levels of consciousness, hallucinations, falls and Parkinsonian symptoms
    4. Frontotemporal dementia - behavioural changes and intellectual changes
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5
Q

What are the 5 As of Alzheimer’s dementia?

A

Amnesia: remembering
Anomia: Naming
Apraxia: Doing
Agnosia: Recognising
Aphasia: Speaking

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6
Q

What Investigations are used to diagnose/ monitor dementia?

A

Bedside:
1. Cognitive Assessment → Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE, patient who scores 24 points or less is generally considered to have dementia)
24-30 (no cognitive impairment), 18-23 (mild cognitive impairment), 0-17 (severe cognitive impairment)
2. +/- MoCA and ACE assessment

Labs:
1. Blood Screen (primary care - to exclude reversible causes) → FBC, U&E, LFTs, calcium, glucose, TFTs (hypothyroidism), vitamin B12 and folate levels

Imaging:
(CT/MRI/PET - secondary care)
- Narrowed gyri, widened sulci, dilated ventricles, medial temporal vol loss & Cortical and hippocampal atrophy in Alzheimer’s on MRI
- Amlyloid plaques in Alzheimer’s in PET scan
- Lacunar infarcts (white areas on MRI) in Vascular
- Metabolic disorders and atrophy in frontal and temporal lobes in Frontotemporal
- Also look for reversible causes such as subdural haematoma.
- Lewy Body Dementia ⇒ SPECT (DATscan)

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7
Q

How is dementia managed?

A
  1. 1st Line (mild-moderate Alzheimer’s) → acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (donepezil, rivastigmine - if hallucinations one of main symptoms, galantamine)
    - Prolonged QT = contraindication for acetylcholinesterase inhibitors
  2. 2nd Line (or for severe Alzheimer’s) → memantine (NMDA receptor antagonist, leading to decreased glutamate induced excitotoxicity)
    - Avoid antipsychotics in Lewy Body Dementia ⇒ may cause irreversible parkinsonism
  3. Non-Pharmacological Treatment
    - Cognitive Stimulation Therapy → improve memory and problem solving skills
    - Cognitive Rehabilitation
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