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Dementia

Nyreese N. Castro MPH, CPH, BS.
 Dementia is a clinical syndrome involving a
    sustained loss of intellectual functions and
    memory of sufficient severity to cause dysfunction
    in daily living. Its key features include:
   Progressive decline of intellectual (usually over
    months to years)
   Loss of short-term memory and at least one other
    cognitive deficit
   No disturbance of consciousness
   Deficit severe enough to cause impairment of
    function
   Not delirious
 Dementia in the geriatric population can be
  grouped into two broad categories:
 Reversible or partially reversible dementias
 Nonreversible dementias
Causes of Nonreversible Dementias
 Dementia is an acquired persistent and progressive
    impairment in intellectual function, with compromise of
    memory and at least one other cognitive domain,
    most commonly:
   language impairment
   apraxia (inability to perform motor tasks, such as
    cutting a loaf of bread, despite intact motor function)
   agnosia (inability to recognize objects)
   impaired executive function (poor abstraction, mental
    flexibility, planning, and judgment).
   The diagnosis of dementia requires a significant
    decline in function that is severe enough to interfere
    with work or social life.
 Depression and delirium are also common in
  elders, may coexist with dementia, and may also
  present with cognitive impairment.
 Depression is a common concomitant of early
  dementia. A patient with depression and cognitive
  impairment whose intellectual function improves
  with treatment of the mood disorder has an
  almost fivefold greater risk of suffering irreversible
  dementia later in life.
 Delirium, characterized by acute confusion,
  occurs much more commonly in patients with
  underlying dementia.
Clinical Findings
 Screening:
 1. Cognitive Impairment
 2. Decision Making Capacity
Cognitive Impairment
 Although there is no consensus at present on
 whether older patients should be screened for
 dementia, the benefits of early detection include
 identification of potentially reversible
 causes, planning for the future (including
 discussing values and completing advance care
 directives), and providing support and counseling
 for the caregiver.
 The combination of a clock drawing task with a three-
  item word recall (also known as the "mini-cog") is a
  simple screening test that is fairly quick to administer.
  Although a number of different methods for
  administering and scoring the clock draw test have
  been described, pre-drawing a four inch circle on a
  sheet of paper and instructing the patient to "draw a
  clock" with the time set at 10 minutes after 11.
 Scores are classified as normal, almost normal, or
  abnormal.
 When a patient is able to draw a clock normally and
  can remember all 3 objects, dementia is unlikely.
 When a patient fails this simple screen, further
  cognitive evaluation with the Folstein Mini Mental
  State Exam (MMSE) or other instruments is
  warranted.
 It is common for a cognitively impaired elder to face a
    serious medical decision and for the clinicians involved in
    his care to ascertain whether the capacity exists to make
    the choice. There are five components of a thorough
    assessment:
   (1) ability to express a choice
   (2) understanding relevant information about the risks and
    benefits of planned therapy and the alternatives, in the
    context of one's values, including no treatment
   (3) comprehension of the problem and its consequences
   (4) ability to reason
   (5) consistency

 A patient's choice should follow rationally from an
    understanding of the consequences.
 Cultural sensitivity must be used in applying
    these five components to people of various
    cultural backgrounds.
   Decision-making capacity varies over time:
   A delirious patient may regain his capacity after
    an infection is treated, and so reassessments are
    often appropriate.
   The capacity to make a decision is a function of
    the decision in question.
   A woman with mild dementia may lack the
    capacity to consent to coronary artery bypass
    grafting yet retain the capacity to designate a
Signs and Symptoms
 The clinician can gather important information about
    the type of dementia that may be present by asking
    about:
   (1) the rate of progression of the deficits as well as
    their nature (including any personality or behavioral
    change)
   (2) the presence of other neurologic symptoms,
    particularly motor problems
   (3) risk factors for HIV
   (4) family history of dementia
   (5) medications, with particular attention to recent
    changes.

 Work-up is directed at identifying any potentially
    reversible causes of dementia. However, such cases
    are indeed rare.
 AD typically presents with early problems in memory
  and visuospatial abilities (eg, becoming lost in familiar
  surroundings, inability to copy a geometric design on
  paper), yet social graces may be retained despite
  advanced cognitive decline.
 Personality changes and behavioral difficulties
  (wandering, inappropriate sexual behavior, agitation)
  may develop as the disease progresses.
 Hallucinations may occur in moderate to severe
  dementia. End-stage disease is characterized by
  near-mutism; inability to sit up, hold up the head, or
  track objects with the eyes; difficulty with eating and
  swallowing; weight loss; bowel or bladder
  incontinence; and recurrent respiratory or urinary
  infections.
"Subcortical" dementias
 (eg, the dementia of Parkinson disease, and
 some cases of vascular dementia) are
 characterized by psychomotor slowing, reduced
 attention, early loss of executive function, and
 personality changes.
Dementia with Lewy bodies
 may be confused with delirium, as fluctuating
    cognitive impairment is frequently observed.
   Rigidity and bradykinesia are the primary
    signs, and tremor is rare.
   Response to dopaminergic agonist therapy is
    poor.
   Complex visual hallucinations—typically of people
    or animals—may be an early feature that can
    help distinguish dementia with Lewy bodies from
    AD.
   These patients demonstrate a hypersensitivity to
    neuroleptic therapy, and attempts to treat the
    hallucinations may lead to marked worsening of
    extrapyramidal symptoms.
Frontotemporal dementias
 are a group of diseases that include Pick
  disease, dementia associated with amyotrophic lateral
  sclerosis, and others.
 Patients manifest personality change
  (euphoria, disinhibition, apathy) and compulsive
  behaviors (often peculiar eating habits or
  hyperorality).
 In contrast to AD, visuospatial function is relatively
  preserved.
 Dementia in association with motor findings, such as
  extrapyramidal features or ataxia, may represent a
  less common disorder (eg, progressive supranuclear
  palsy, corticobasal ganglionic
  degeneration, olivopontocerebellar atrophy).
Physical Examination
 The neurologic examination emphasizes
  assessment of mental status but should also
  include evaluation for sensory deficits, possible
  previous strokes, parkinsonism, or peripheral
  neuropathy.
 The remainder of the physical examination should
  focus on identifying comorbid conditions that may
  aggravate the individual's disability.
Laboratory Findings
 Laboratory studies should include a complete
  blood
  count, electrolytes, calcium, creatinine, glucose, t
  hyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), and vitamin
  B12 levels.
 HIV testing, RPR (rapid plasma reagin)
  test, heavy metal screen, and liver biochemical
  tests may be informative in selected patients but
  should not be considered part of routine testing.
Imaging
 Most patients should receive neuroimaging as
  part of the diagnostic work-up to rule out subdural
  hematoma, tumor, previous stroke, and
  hydrocephalus (usually normal pressure).
 Those who are younger and those who have
  focal neurologic symptoms or signs, seizures, gait
  abnormalities, and an acute or subacute onset
  are most likely to yield positive findings and most
  likely to benefit from MRI scanning.
 In older patients with a more classic picture of AD
  in whom neuroimaging is desired, a noncontrast
  CT scan is sufficient.
Treatment
 Soon after diagnosis, patients and families should be
  made aware of the Alzheimer's Association
  (http://www.alz.org) as well as the wealth of helpful
  community and online resources and publications
  available.
 Caregiver support, education, and counseling can
  prevent or delay nursing home placement.
 Education should include the manifestations and
  natural history of dementia as well as the availability
  of local support services such as respite care.
 Collaborative care models and disease management
  programs appear to improve the quality of care for
  patients with dementia.
Cognitive Impairment
 Demented patients have greatly diminished
  cognitive reserve, they are at high risk for
  experiencing acute cognitive or functional decline
  in the setting of new medical illness.
 Consequently, fragile cognitive status may be
  best maintained by ensuring that comorbid
  diseases such as congestive heart failure and
  infections are detected and treated.
 Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors:
 The majority of experts recommend considering a
  trial of acetylcholinesterase inhibitors
  (eg, donepezil, galantamine, rivastigmine) in most
  patients with mild to moderate AD.
 Memantine
 In clinical trials, patients with more advanced
  disease have been shown to have statistical
  benefit from the use of memantine, an N- methyl-
  D-aspartate (NMDA) antagonist, with or without
  concomitant use of an acetylcholinesterase
  inhibitor.
Behavioral Problems:
Nonpharmacologic approaches

 Behavioral problems in demented patients are often
  best managed with a nonpharmacologic approach.
  Initially, it should be established that the problem is
  not unrecognized delirium, pain, urinary
  obstruction, or fecal impaction.
 Caregivers are taught to use simple language when
  communicating with the patient, to break down
  activities into simple component tasks, and to use a
  "distract, not confront" approach when the patient
  seems disturbed by a troublesome issue.
 Additional steps to address behavioral problems
  include the discontinuation of all medications except
  those considered absolutely necessary and
  correction, if possible, of sensory deficits.
Behavioral Problems: Pharmacologic
approaches
 Patients with depressive symptoms may show
  improvement with antidepressant therapy.
 Patients with dementia with Lewy bodies have shown
  clinically significant improvement in behavioral symptoms
  when treated with rivastigmine (3–6 mg orally twice daily).
 For those with AD and agitation, no agents, including
  acetylcholinesterase inhibitors and antipsychotics, have
  demonstrated consistent efficacy. Despite the lack of
  strong evidence, antipsychotic medications have remained
  a mainstay for the treatment of behavioral
  disturbances, largely because of the lack of alternative
  agents.
 The newer atypical antipsychotic agents
  (risperidone, olanzapine, quetiapine, aripiprazole, clozapin
  e, ziprasidone) are reported to be better tolerated than
  older agents but should be avoided in patients with
  vascular risk factors due to an increased risk of stroke and
Prognosis
 Life expectancy after a diagnosis of AD is
  typically 3–15 years.
 Other neurodegenerative dementias, such as
  dementia with Lewy bodies, show more rapid
  decline.
 Hospice is often appropriate for patients with end-
  stage dementia.
When to Refer
 Referral for neuropsychological testing may be
 helpful in the following circumstances: to
 distinguish dementia from depression, to
 diagnose dementia in persons of very poor
 education or very high premorbid intellect, and to
 aid diagnosis when impairment is mild.
Question 1
 ___________ is an acquired persistent and
    progressive impairment in intellectual function,
    with compromise of memory and at least one
    other cognitive domain.
   A. Depression
   B. Dementia
   C. Delirium
   D. Immobility
 B. Dementia
Question 2
 The clinician can gather important information
    about the type of dementia that may be present
    by asking about which of the following, except:
   A. the rate of progression of the deficits as well as
    their nature (including any personality or
    behavioral change)
   B. the presence of other neurologic
    symptoms, particularly motor problems
   C. risk factors for Syphilis
   D. family history of dementia
   E. all of the above
 C. risk factors for Syphilis

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Dementia

  • 2.  Dementia is a clinical syndrome involving a sustained loss of intellectual functions and memory of sufficient severity to cause dysfunction in daily living. Its key features include:  Progressive decline of intellectual (usually over months to years)  Loss of short-term memory and at least one other cognitive deficit  No disturbance of consciousness  Deficit severe enough to cause impairment of function  Not delirious
  • 3.  Dementia in the geriatric population can be grouped into two broad categories:  Reversible or partially reversible dementias  Nonreversible dementias
  • 4.
  • 6.  Dementia is an acquired persistent and progressive impairment in intellectual function, with compromise of memory and at least one other cognitive domain, most commonly:  language impairment  apraxia (inability to perform motor tasks, such as cutting a loaf of bread, despite intact motor function)  agnosia (inability to recognize objects)  impaired executive function (poor abstraction, mental flexibility, planning, and judgment).  The diagnosis of dementia requires a significant decline in function that is severe enough to interfere with work or social life.
  • 7.  Depression and delirium are also common in elders, may coexist with dementia, and may also present with cognitive impairment.  Depression is a common concomitant of early dementia. A patient with depression and cognitive impairment whose intellectual function improves with treatment of the mood disorder has an almost fivefold greater risk of suffering irreversible dementia later in life.  Delirium, characterized by acute confusion, occurs much more commonly in patients with underlying dementia.
  • 8. Clinical Findings  Screening:  1. Cognitive Impairment  2. Decision Making Capacity
  • 9. Cognitive Impairment  Although there is no consensus at present on whether older patients should be screened for dementia, the benefits of early detection include identification of potentially reversible causes, planning for the future (including discussing values and completing advance care directives), and providing support and counseling for the caregiver.
  • 10.  The combination of a clock drawing task with a three- item word recall (also known as the "mini-cog") is a simple screening test that is fairly quick to administer. Although a number of different methods for administering and scoring the clock draw test have been described, pre-drawing a four inch circle on a sheet of paper and instructing the patient to "draw a clock" with the time set at 10 minutes after 11.  Scores are classified as normal, almost normal, or abnormal.  When a patient is able to draw a clock normally and can remember all 3 objects, dementia is unlikely.  When a patient fails this simple screen, further cognitive evaluation with the Folstein Mini Mental State Exam (MMSE) or other instruments is warranted.
  • 11.  It is common for a cognitively impaired elder to face a serious medical decision and for the clinicians involved in his care to ascertain whether the capacity exists to make the choice. There are five components of a thorough assessment:  (1) ability to express a choice  (2) understanding relevant information about the risks and benefits of planned therapy and the alternatives, in the context of one's values, including no treatment  (3) comprehension of the problem and its consequences  (4) ability to reason  (5) consistency  A patient's choice should follow rationally from an understanding of the consequences.
  • 12.  Cultural sensitivity must be used in applying these five components to people of various cultural backgrounds.  Decision-making capacity varies over time:  A delirious patient may regain his capacity after an infection is treated, and so reassessments are often appropriate.  The capacity to make a decision is a function of the decision in question.  A woman with mild dementia may lack the capacity to consent to coronary artery bypass grafting yet retain the capacity to designate a
  • 13. Signs and Symptoms  The clinician can gather important information about the type of dementia that may be present by asking about:  (1) the rate of progression of the deficits as well as their nature (including any personality or behavioral change)  (2) the presence of other neurologic symptoms, particularly motor problems  (3) risk factors for HIV  (4) family history of dementia  (5) medications, with particular attention to recent changes.  Work-up is directed at identifying any potentially reversible causes of dementia. However, such cases are indeed rare.
  • 14.  AD typically presents with early problems in memory and visuospatial abilities (eg, becoming lost in familiar surroundings, inability to copy a geometric design on paper), yet social graces may be retained despite advanced cognitive decline.  Personality changes and behavioral difficulties (wandering, inappropriate sexual behavior, agitation) may develop as the disease progresses.  Hallucinations may occur in moderate to severe dementia. End-stage disease is characterized by near-mutism; inability to sit up, hold up the head, or track objects with the eyes; difficulty with eating and swallowing; weight loss; bowel or bladder incontinence; and recurrent respiratory or urinary infections.
  • 15. "Subcortical" dementias  (eg, the dementia of Parkinson disease, and some cases of vascular dementia) are characterized by psychomotor slowing, reduced attention, early loss of executive function, and personality changes.
  • 16. Dementia with Lewy bodies  may be confused with delirium, as fluctuating cognitive impairment is frequently observed.  Rigidity and bradykinesia are the primary signs, and tremor is rare.  Response to dopaminergic agonist therapy is poor.  Complex visual hallucinations—typically of people or animals—may be an early feature that can help distinguish dementia with Lewy bodies from AD.  These patients demonstrate a hypersensitivity to neuroleptic therapy, and attempts to treat the hallucinations may lead to marked worsening of extrapyramidal symptoms.
  • 17. Frontotemporal dementias  are a group of diseases that include Pick disease, dementia associated with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, and others.  Patients manifest personality change (euphoria, disinhibition, apathy) and compulsive behaviors (often peculiar eating habits or hyperorality).  In contrast to AD, visuospatial function is relatively preserved.  Dementia in association with motor findings, such as extrapyramidal features or ataxia, may represent a less common disorder (eg, progressive supranuclear palsy, corticobasal ganglionic degeneration, olivopontocerebellar atrophy).
  • 18. Physical Examination  The neurologic examination emphasizes assessment of mental status but should also include evaluation for sensory deficits, possible previous strokes, parkinsonism, or peripheral neuropathy.  The remainder of the physical examination should focus on identifying comorbid conditions that may aggravate the individual's disability.
  • 19. Laboratory Findings  Laboratory studies should include a complete blood count, electrolytes, calcium, creatinine, glucose, t hyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), and vitamin B12 levels.  HIV testing, RPR (rapid plasma reagin) test, heavy metal screen, and liver biochemical tests may be informative in selected patients but should not be considered part of routine testing.
  • 20. Imaging  Most patients should receive neuroimaging as part of the diagnostic work-up to rule out subdural hematoma, tumor, previous stroke, and hydrocephalus (usually normal pressure).  Those who are younger and those who have focal neurologic symptoms or signs, seizures, gait abnormalities, and an acute or subacute onset are most likely to yield positive findings and most likely to benefit from MRI scanning.  In older patients with a more classic picture of AD in whom neuroimaging is desired, a noncontrast CT scan is sufficient.
  • 21. Treatment  Soon after diagnosis, patients and families should be made aware of the Alzheimer's Association (http://www.alz.org) as well as the wealth of helpful community and online resources and publications available.  Caregiver support, education, and counseling can prevent or delay nursing home placement.  Education should include the manifestations and natural history of dementia as well as the availability of local support services such as respite care.  Collaborative care models and disease management programs appear to improve the quality of care for patients with dementia.
  • 22. Cognitive Impairment  Demented patients have greatly diminished cognitive reserve, they are at high risk for experiencing acute cognitive or functional decline in the setting of new medical illness.  Consequently, fragile cognitive status may be best maintained by ensuring that comorbid diseases such as congestive heart failure and infections are detected and treated.
  • 23.  Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors:  The majority of experts recommend considering a trial of acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (eg, donepezil, galantamine, rivastigmine) in most patients with mild to moderate AD.  Memantine  In clinical trials, patients with more advanced disease have been shown to have statistical benefit from the use of memantine, an N- methyl- D-aspartate (NMDA) antagonist, with or without concomitant use of an acetylcholinesterase inhibitor.
  • 24. Behavioral Problems: Nonpharmacologic approaches  Behavioral problems in demented patients are often best managed with a nonpharmacologic approach. Initially, it should be established that the problem is not unrecognized delirium, pain, urinary obstruction, or fecal impaction.  Caregivers are taught to use simple language when communicating with the patient, to break down activities into simple component tasks, and to use a "distract, not confront" approach when the patient seems disturbed by a troublesome issue.  Additional steps to address behavioral problems include the discontinuation of all medications except those considered absolutely necessary and correction, if possible, of sensory deficits.
  • 25. Behavioral Problems: Pharmacologic approaches  Patients with depressive symptoms may show improvement with antidepressant therapy.  Patients with dementia with Lewy bodies have shown clinically significant improvement in behavioral symptoms when treated with rivastigmine (3–6 mg orally twice daily).  For those with AD and agitation, no agents, including acetylcholinesterase inhibitors and antipsychotics, have demonstrated consistent efficacy. Despite the lack of strong evidence, antipsychotic medications have remained a mainstay for the treatment of behavioral disturbances, largely because of the lack of alternative agents.  The newer atypical antipsychotic agents (risperidone, olanzapine, quetiapine, aripiprazole, clozapin e, ziprasidone) are reported to be better tolerated than older agents but should be avoided in patients with vascular risk factors due to an increased risk of stroke and
  • 26. Prognosis  Life expectancy after a diagnosis of AD is typically 3–15 years.  Other neurodegenerative dementias, such as dementia with Lewy bodies, show more rapid decline.  Hospice is often appropriate for patients with end- stage dementia.
  • 27. When to Refer  Referral for neuropsychological testing may be helpful in the following circumstances: to distinguish dementia from depression, to diagnose dementia in persons of very poor education or very high premorbid intellect, and to aid diagnosis when impairment is mild.
  • 28. Question 1  ___________ is an acquired persistent and progressive impairment in intellectual function, with compromise of memory and at least one other cognitive domain.  A. Depression  B. Dementia  C. Delirium  D. Immobility
  • 30. Question 2  The clinician can gather important information about the type of dementia that may be present by asking about which of the following, except:  A. the rate of progression of the deficits as well as their nature (including any personality or behavioral change)  B. the presence of other neurologic symptoms, particularly motor problems  C. risk factors for Syphilis  D. family history of dementia  E. all of the above
  • 31.  C. risk factors for Syphilis