Psychiatry: Dementia Flashcards

1
Q

Alzheimers disease, Parkinson’s disease and Lewy body all types of what

A

Degenerative forms of dementia

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2
Q

What are the key features of Alzheimers (name the additional ones if you can)

A

Agnosia - difficulty recognising objects, people, sounds
Apraxia - difficulty using objects
Amnesia - memory loss, first short term memory of time
Aphasia - expressive (Brocas) or receptive (wernicke’s), lexical anomia (word finding difficulty)
Associated behaviours: labile mood, irritable, sexually disinhibited, incontinence, depression, disorientation, personality change
Also Hallucinations + Delusions

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3
Q

What are the early signs of Alzheimers disease

A

Forgetfulness
Disorientation in self
Change in behaviour e.g. wandering

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4
Q

What are the key features on an Alzheimers MRI

A
Cortical atrophy (parietal and temporal), 
B-amyloid plaques and NFT in cortex
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5
Q

What are the MMSE ranges for Alzheimers Disease

A

Mild = 21-16
Mod = 20-10
Severe < 10

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6
Q

What is the clinical course of Alzheimers

A

Gradual and progressive

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7
Q

How does early onset Alzheimer’s differ from normal

A

Early onset < 65yo
Rapid and severe detrioration in cognition with severe apraxia and agnosia
Poor prognosis

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8
Q

What are the 6 RF for poor prognosis in Alzheimer’s

A
Male 
Age < 65yo 
Parietal lobe damage 
Severe focal deficit e.g. apraxia 
Observed depression 
Prominent behavioural problems
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9
Q

What is the 1st line treatment for Alzheimers (mild-mod)

A

Mild-moderate

  1. ACHe-i (increase Ach in cortex)
    - Donepazil, rivastigmine, galantamine
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10
Q

What is 2nd line for Alzheimers (mod-sev)

A

Mod-severe

2. NMDA receptor antagonist, Memantine

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11
Q

What are the three most common types of dementia

A
  1. Alzheimers
  2. Vascular
  3. Lewy Body
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12
Q

What is LB dementia

A

Degenerative, mixed-type dementia
- LB deposits within the basal ganglia of the midbrain a/w neuronal change (decrease in Ach transmission) and vascular changes (30%)

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13
Q

In what demographic does LB occur

A

50-83yo, M>F

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14
Q

What are the cardinal symptoms of LB dementia

What are the other symptoms

A
  1. Parkinsonism
  2. Fluctuating cognition and consciousness (mute and unresponsive for periods)
  3. Hallucinations and delusions

Depression, falls and syncope, Antipsychotic sensitivity

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15
Q

What are the main treatment options for LB

A
  1. ACHe-i = donepazil, rivastigmine, galantine

2. clonezapm = for sleeping difficulties

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16
Q

What should you be absolutely cautious with when treating LB dementia

A

DO NOT GIVE A/P drugs!! They will cause:

  1. Permanent parkinsonism
  2. Neuroleptic malignant syndrome
  3. increase risk of mortality
17
Q

What should you be absolutely cautious with when treating LB dementia

A

DO NOT GIVE A/P drugs due to A/P sensitivity!! They will cause:

  1. Permanent parkinsonism
  2. Neuroleptic malignant syndrome
  3. increase risk of mortality
18
Q

What are the causes

A

Thromboembolic events or infarcts of s/m cerebral vessels

19
Q

Which demographic are at particular risk of Alzheimers

A

Down syndrome - chr.21 holds gene for B-amyloid plaques

20
Q

What is the clinical course of LB dementia

A

Gradual and progressive with fluctuating cognition and consciousness

21
Q

What are the three clinical syndromes of vascular dementia

A
  1. Cognitive impairment following single stroke
  2. Multiple infarct dementia (MID)
  3. Binswanger disease (progressive small vessel disease)
22
Q

Explain the pathology and symptoms of MID

A

multiple strokes cause step-wise deterioration of cognition

Period between strokes are stable

23
Q

What is the region of the brain associated with the highest risk of vascular dementia following a single stroke

A

Mid brain and thalamic region

24
Q

Explain the pathology and symptoms of Binswanger disease

A

multiple micro-vascular infarcts perforate vessels in brain –> white matter changes and lacunae formation

Gradual and progressive deterioration in cognitive function, psychomotor retardation and motor dysfunction

25
Q

What is the treatment of vascular dementia

A
  1. determine cause
  2. daily aspirin - slow progression
  3. statin
  4. HTN control (CCB) - not BB due to rhabdomyolysis risk
  5. optimise diabetic control
  6. Lifestyle changes - diet, exercise etc.