Dementia Flashcards

1
Q

Aetiology:

  1. Reversible conditions
  2. Mild cognitive impairment
  3. Degnerative
  4. Vascular
  5. Psychiatric
  6. Neurological
  7. Neoplastic
  8. Endocrinological/Metabolic/Nutritional
  9. Trauma
  10. Infectious
  11. Inflammatory
  12. Medication
  13. Toxic
A
  1. 10-20% potentially reversible conditions.
  2. newly acquired cognitive decline beyond that expected for age and educational background but not causing significant functional impairment. can be amnestic/non-amnestic. 10-15% progress Alzheimer’s a year.
  3. Alzheimer’s(most common at 60%), Lewy body, Parkinson’s, Huntington’s
  4. 5-20% cases
  5. delirium, depression, amnestic syndromes
  6. Normal pressure hydrocephalus
  7. Metastatic lesions, brain and meningeal tumours
  8. Cushing’s, thyroid, parathyroid, porphyria, Wilson’s disease, hypopituitarism, vit B12/folate deficiency
  9. Controversial evidence but retrospective data show that risk f for dementia/Alzheimer’s
  10. Lyme disease, neurosyphilis, TB meningitis, CJD
  11. Demyelinating disease, Sjorgen’s, Lupus erythematosus
  12. Antihistamines, anticholinergics
  13. Alcohol, arsenic, lead, mercury, CO, Cyanide
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2
Q

Red flags:

A
  1. Delirium
  2. Depression
  3. Head injury(controversial evidence)
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3
Q

History:

  1. Onset
  2. FHx, drug and alcohol, risk f for stroke
  3. Parkinson’s
A
  1. a) Insidious(months to years), progressive course –> degenerative
    b) Abrupt change/stepwise decline after clinical event ie CVA –> vascular
    c) Acute(days to weeks)/subacute(weeks to months) –> infectious/metabolic/neoplastic/medication/CJD/hydrocephalus
  2. 80% prevalence of dementia after 10y
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4
Q

Cognitive exam:

  1. Indications
  2. Exams
  3. Functional assessment questionnaire
A
  1. > 80y; moving to new situations; >65y in hospital; undergoing surgery; old person with history of delirium, depression, diabetes, Parkinson’s, recently unexplained functional losses
  2. Folstein MMSE(<24), MoCA, ADAS-Cog, MDRS
  3. Can diff btw MCI and dementia.
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5
Q

Physical examination:

  1. Cranial nerves
  2. Motor examination
  3. Co-ordination and gait
  4. Sensory examination
  5. Reflexes
  6. Hearing
  7. CV exam
A
  1. Visual field defects –> Vascular dementia.
    Lateral gaze palsy, nystagmus, ataxia –> alcohol-related dementia
  2. Hemiparesis –> vascular dementia. Extrapyramidal signs ie resting tremor –> Alzheimer’s and normal ageing
  3. Transient gait abn –> vascular.
    gait abn, impaired vibration/position sense, spasticity, paraesthesias –> vit B12 def.
    Pronounced gait disturbance –> NPH
  4. Peripheral neuropathy –> underlying nutritional def/metabolic/toxic
  5. Usually normal in Alz, primitve reflexes may be present.
    Generalised myoclonus and motor disorder –> CJD.
    Asymmetric deep tendon reflexes, unilat extensor plantar resp –> vascular
  6. Hearing loss from central auditory dysfunction
  7. Abn findings –> vascular
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6
Q

Features of cortical vs subcortical dementia:

  1. Language
  2. Speech
  3. Praxis
  4. Agnosia
  5. Calculation
  6. Motor sys
  7. Extra movements
A
  1. aphasia early vs normal
  2. Normal until late vs dysarthria
  3. Apraxia vs normal
  4. Present vs absent
  5. Early impairment vs normal until late
  6. usually normal posture/tone vs stooped/extended posture, increased tone.
  7. None(possibly myoclonus in Alz) vs tremor, chorea, tics
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7
Q

Delirium vs Dementia:

  1. Onset
  2. Duration
  3. Course
  4. Consciousness
  5. Context
  6. Perceptual disturbance
  7. Sleep-wake cycle
  8. Orientation
  9. Speech
A
  1. Acute vs Gradual
  2. Hours-weeks vs Months-Years
  3. Fluctuating vs Progressive Deterioration
  4. Altered vs Normal (Lewy body dementia and multiple infarcts may feature transient episodes of impaired consciousness)
  5. New illness/medication vs Health unchanged
  6. Common vs late stages
  7. Disrupted vs Normal
  8. Usually impaired for time & unfamiliar people/places vs late stages
  9. Inchoerent, rapid/slow vs Word finding difficulties
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8
Q

Env Risk f:

  1. Alz
  2. Vascular
  3. Both
A
  1. Head injury, low education attainment, vascular
  2. Past stroke, AF
  3. Smoking, hypert., hypercholesterolaemia, diabetes, obesity, prev MI
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9
Q

Px with cognitive impairment:

A
  1. Is it objective?(standard test)
  2. Onset?
    - acute/fluctuating → rule out delirium
  3. Mood Sx → rule out depression and reassess cognition after tx.
  4. Functional impairment
    - if none → mild cognitive impairment
  5. Progressive over at least 6/12
    - if no → stable cognitive impairment
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10
Q

DDx of cognitive impairment:

A
  1. Dementia
  2. Delirium
  3. Mood disorders
    - Depression=pseudodementia, risk f for dementia
    - may trial tx then reassess cognition
  4. Mild cognitive impairment
  5. Stable cognitive impairment
    - stroke, traumatic/hypoxic brain injury, viral encephalitis
  6. Psychotic illness
  7. Intellectual disability
  8. Dissociative disorders
  9. Factitious disorder and malingering
  10. Amnesic syndrome
  11. Subjective cognitive impairment(increased risk MCI and dementia)
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11
Q

Genes implicated in early onset AD:

*ApoE gene associated with late onset AD

A
  1. APP -Chr 21
  2. Presenilin-1 -Chr 14
  3. Presenilin-2 -Chr 1
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12
Q

Management:

  1. Cognitive fn.
  2. BPSD
A
  1. -structured group stimulation programmes.
    - Ch-esterase inhibitors: donepezil, rivastigmine, galantamine.
    - rivastigmiine best evidence in Lewy body dementia
    - Medication ineffective in frontotemporal dementia.
    - Memantine(NMDA-R antagonist) in moderate-severe Alz. when intolerant to Ch-esterase inhibitors.
  2. -Assess for pain and depression.
    - Massage, aromatherapy, animal-assisted therapy.
    - Trazodone for disturbed behaviour. Avoid benzodiazepines.
    - Antipsychotics if needed. In Lewy Body Dementia, antipsychotics can precipitate irreversible parkinsonism, impaired consciousness, severe autonomic symptoms and 2-3x increase in mortality. Benzodiazepine and Cholinesterase inhibitors safer here.
    - avoid anti-Ch for depression.
    - 50% pts w Lewy body dementia have adverse reaction to antipsychotics(irreversible parkinsonism, impaired consciousness, severe autonomic Sx, increased mortality). Benzodiazepines/Ch-esterase inhibitors more suitable.
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13
Q

TYPES OF DEMENTIA:

  1. Alzheimer’s(62%)
  2. Vascular/multi-infarct(17%)
  3. Mixed(10%)
  4. Lewy body dementia(4%)
  5. Parkinson’s disease with dementia(2%)
  6. Frontotemporal dementia(Pick’s disease)(2%)
A
    • Gradual onset with progressive cognitive decline
      - Early memory loss
    • Focal neurological signs and symptoms
      - Evidence of cerebrovascular disease
      - Stepwise/uneven deterioration
      - Fluctuating course(nocturnal confusion)
      - patchy cognitive deficits
      - abnormal gait
  1. Features of both Alzehimer’s and vascular dementias
    • Day-to-day(shorter) fluctuations in cognitive performance
      - recurrent visual hallucinations
      - Parkinsonisian motor signs(rigidiy, bradykinesia, tremor)
      - Recurrent falls and syncope
      - Transient disturbances of consciousness
      - Extreme sensitivity to antipsychotics
  2. Dx of Parkinson’s disease prior to cognitive symptoms. Dementia features similar to Lewy body dementia
    • Early decline in social & personal conduct
      - early emotional blunting
      - attenuated speech otuput, echolalia, perseveration, mutism
      - primary progressive aphasia
      - early loss of insight
      - relative sparing of other cognitive functions
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14
Q

CORTICAL VS SUBCORTICAL DEMENTIA:

  1. Language
  2. Speech
  3. Praxis
  4. Agnosia
  5. Calculation
  6. Motor system
  7. Extra movement

Cortical: Alzheimer’s, frontotemporal dementias
Subcortical: Parkinson’s, Lewy body dementia, Huntington’s, progressive supranuclear palsy, Wilson’s disease, NPH, MS, HIV-related dementia
Mixed: vascular dementia, infection-induced dementias(CJD, neurosyphilis, chronic meningitis)

A
  1. Early aphasia vs Normal
  2. Normal until late vs Dysarthric
  3. Apraxia vs Normal
  4. Present vs usually absent
  5. Early impairment vs normal until late
  6. Usually normal posture/tone vs stooped/extended posture, increased tone
  7. None vs tremor, chorea, tics
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