Alzheimers Dementia Alzheimers Dementia Alzheimers Dementia Alzheimers Dementia
Alzheimers Dementia Alzheimers Dementia Alzheimers Dementia Alzheimers Dementia
Alzheimers Dementia Alzheimers Dementia Alzheimers Dementia Alzheimers Dementia
PROGRESSIVE CHANGES:
MEMORY IMPAIRMENT AND…
History of Presenting Illness : Either
To qualify as demented, you must - Aphasia
Differential Diagnoses - Apraxia
- Aphasia - Agnosia
- Cortical Basal Ganglionic Degeneration - Loss of executive function
- Dementia in Motor Neuron Disease eg. planning, organizing, sequencing, abstracting
- Dementia with Lewy Bodies - NOT RESULTING FROM
- Frontal and Temporal Lobe Dementia Delirium or a Psychiatric or Neurological disease
*Early Onset: if onset is at age 65 years or below
- Lyme Disease
- Multiinfarct Dementia
commonest cause of dementia is
- Neurosyphilis
- Parkinson Disease Alzheimer's disease, = 60-80 % of
- Parkinson-Plus Syndromes The next commonest is Third commonest =
Lewy Body disease
- Prion-Related Diseases vascular dementia, = 10-20%
- Thyroid Disease
- Wilson Disease Findings which exclude Alzheimers
Findings on History
Mainly interested in the above criteria, thus:
- determine progression (CHRONIC)
- determine degree of impairment
- personality change?
- Inappropriate behaviours?
- LATER CHANGES:
- apathy,
- decreased speech output,
- failure to recognize family members,
- incontinence.
- RULE OUT DIFFERENTIALS :
diagnosis is by exclusion
Prognosis
The lifetime risk of developing Alzheimers == 1:4 DELIRIUM CONFERS A POORER OUTCOME:
14% of individuals older than 65 years have AD No matter what your condition, it will be worse
40% in individuals older than 80 years have AD Otherwise… DELEIRIUM IS REVERSIBLE:
If the cause of the delirium can be successfully treated, the
WOMEN ARE MORE AT RISK. recovery phase usually begins in 10-14 days,
most recovering within 4 weeks;
RISK DECREASES AFTER YOU REACH
90-100 y.o (good genes!)
BUT: in 10% of patients confusion may last for up to 6 months
Epidemiology
RISK FACTORS FOR DEMENTIA RISK FACTORS FOR DELIRIUM
A. Age J. Age over 60 years
1. Risk increases with age over 65 years K. Drug or alcohol addiction and withdrawal
B. Apo E4 Allele L. Prior brain injury (vascular or traumatic injury)
1. Confers 8% risk if two alleles M. Hearing Loss or decreased Visual Acuity
C. Family History of Alzheimer's Disease
N. Insomnia or other sleep deprivation
D. FAD gene
E. Female gender O. Polypharmacy
F. Low education P. Hospitalization or post-surgery
G. Head Trauma Q. Multiple comorbid conditions
H. Myocardial Infarction R. Poor nutritional status
I. Combined CV factors in middle age (odds ratio 3.5) S. Hepatic failure
1. Hyperlipidemia T. Chronic Renal Failure
2. Hypertension (increased systolic Blood U. Poor nutritional status
Pressure)
- 3% of 65 – 74 year olds
- 20% of 75-84
- 45% of 85+
… are DEMENTED
CATEGORIES OF MEMORY:
PROCEDURAL vs DECLARATIVE:
PROCEDURAL is unconscious, automated eg.
remembering how to write, what language to speak
VIA BASAL GANGLIA + CEREBELLUM (climbing
fibres of cerebellum)
+ Red nucleus and Olive of medulla