L7 Neuropathy of Dementia Flashcards

1
Q

What is dementia and how is is diagnosed?

A

Dementia is a progressive loss of memory and cognition for which there is no cure.

It is diagnosed as a decline in memory with impairment in at least one other cognitive function.

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2
Q

What are the three types of clinical presentation and what are they dependant on?

A

1) Temporo-parietal e.g. Alzheimer’s disease. You see early memory symptoms.
2) Fronto-temporal e.g. FTD. You see behaviour and language disturbance.
3) Subcortical e.g. vascular dementia. You see reduced speed/efficiency of cognition.

These types are dependant on the anatomical location of of the region affected.

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3
Q

What is the biggest risk factor for dementia?

A

Age.

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4
Q

What are the causes of dementia?

A
  • Neurodegeneration.
  • Vascular.
  • Infectious/inflammartory/immune.
  • Toxic and metabolic.
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5
Q

What are the pathological hallmarks of AD?

A
  • Extracellular aggregates of beta-amyloid peptides.
  • Intracellular inclusions of neurofibrillary tangles.
  • Neuritic plaques.
  • Cerebral atrophy.
  • Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (beta-amyloid is deposited in the walls of vascular structures in the CNS). This is a feature of AD, but also commonly occurs in the non-demented elderly.
  • Synaptic and neuronal loss.
  • Gliosis/microglial reaction.
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6
Q

What did genetic studies in the 1990s indicate regarding AD?

A

That beta-amyloid was the causitive factor in AD.

This was concluded because mutations in the gene APP (beta-amyloid precursor protein), PSEN1&2 (codes for the beta-amyloid processing pathway components) led to inherited, early-onset AD.

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7
Q

What is the amyloid cascade hypothesis?

A

This proposes that beta-amyloid accumulation initiates the pathophysiology of AD leading to neurofibrillary tangles and neurodegeneration, resulting in memory loss.

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8
Q

What did drug therapeutics aimed at plaque reduction show?

A

They were successful at reducing beta-amyloid plaques, but show no reversal in memory deficits nor halt in cognitive decline.

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9
Q

How are beta-amyloid peptides obtained?

A

Cleavage of APP.

APP contains a beta-amyloid domain that has cleavage sites for secretase enzymes.

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10
Q

What are the two pathways in which APP is cleaved?

A

1) Non-Amyloidogenic pathway. Cleavage by alpha-secretase releases C-terminal fragment-alpha (CTFa).
2) Amyloidogenic Pathway. Cleavage by beta-secretase releases CTF-beta.

The pathogenic effects of these fragments depends on the length of the fragments. The longer the fragments, the more likely they are to form aggregates.

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11
Q

What are neurofibrillary tangles?

A

These are formed by abnormal aggregation of the tau protein which usually associates with microtubules.

The levels of neurofibrillary tangles correlates strongly with the progression of AD and cognitive symptoms.

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12
Q

What happens in AD that causes dysfunction of Tau?

A
  • Circuit hyperactivity and calcium influx triggers aberrant tau phosphorylation.
  • Tau phosphorylation then leads to dysfunction of PP2A which then causes tau hyperphosphorylation, insolubility and aggregation.
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13
Q

What three pathological indicators does Braak Staging use?

A

1) Beta-amyloid plaques.
2) Tau inclusions.
3) Alpha-synuclein-positive Lewy pathology.

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14
Q

What is a downside of Braak Staging?

A
  • Does not provide a threshold for dementia prediction.

- Often shows an overlap between the demented and non-demented elderly.

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15
Q

What is dementia with Lewy bodies?

A

This is the second most common neurodegenerative cause of dementia.

It leads to fluctuating cognitive decline, visual hallucinations, Parkinsonism and neuroleptic sensitivity.

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16
Q

Describe large vessel vascular dementia.

A
  • Multiple infarcts.
  • Related to location/volume of tissue destroyed.
  • Cause is typically atherosclerosis.
17
Q

Describe small vessel vascular dementia.

A
  • Arteriosclerosis (small penetrating branches).
  • Hypertension and diabetes.
  • White matter degeneration.