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Geriatric Psychiatry Anita S. Kablinger MD Associate Professor Psychiatry and Pharmacology Objectives: Differentiate between the various cognitive disorders Know aspects of normal aging Gain knowledge of the best treatment options for geriatric psychiatric illnesses Why is it a subspecialty? Mental disorders may have different manifestations, pathogenesis, and pathophysiology from younger adults Coexisting chronic medical illness More medicines Cognitive impairments Increased risk for social stressors, including retirement and widowhood Geriatric population increasing 2000, estimated that 1 in 5 Americans were over 55 years of age, and 13% over 65 years of age By 2050, estimates are that 22% will be over the age of 65, and 5% over age 85. Aging and the Life Cycle (Erickson) Young adulthood--intimacy versus isolation Middle-aged--generativity versus selfabsorption Elderly--Integrity versus despair (Acceptance of mortality, satisfaction with one’s meaning in the world) Fear of death is usually a mid-life issue Other tasks of elderly Reminiscence is normative Loss On-time normative incidents do not usually result in crisis Fears are usually pain, disability, abandonment, and dependency Cognition and aging Cognition includes learning, memory, & intelligence Learning is the ability to gain new skills and information. It may be slower in elderly, especially verbal learning. Cognition and aging (continued) Memory is divided into immediate, shortand long- term memory. Immediate memory remains intact. Short-term memory is also intact, however, it is affected by concentration which may be less in older adults. Long-term memory is most affected by aging. Retrieval is less efficient; the elderly need more cues Intelligence Ability to use information in an adaptive way or to apply knowledge to specific circumstances Crystallized intelligence includes vocabulary, verbal skills, and general information can continue to increase throughout life. Fluid intelligence consists of recognizing new patterns and creative problem solving. This peaks in adolescence. Benign senescent forgetfulness Age associated mild memory problems. May also have cognitive problems due to anxiety. Examples are forgetting names, misplacing items, and experiencing difficulty with complex problem-solving. (aging-associated cognitive decline) Psychiatric Evaluation See patient alone to assess for suicidal/homicidal ideation even if cognitively impaired May need info from caretaker May take extended time due to slower response time Other important aspects of history Family history--Alzheimer’s disease is transmitted as an autosomal dominant trait in 10-30% of the offspring of parents with Alzheimer’s disease Review of all meds, over the counter, prescribed, herbal Alcohol and substance abuse history MSE General description mood, feelings, affect witzelsucht is caused by frontal lobe dysfunction and is the tendency to make puns and jokes and laugh aloud at them MSE (continued) perceptual disturbances may be transitory resulting from decreased sensory acuity types of agnosia (the inability to recognize and interpret the significance of sensory impressions: the denial of illness (anosognosia), the denial of a body part (atopognosia); or the inability to recognize objects (visual agnosia) or faces (prosopagnosia) MSE (continued) Language output nonfluent or Broca’s aphasia--understanding intact but can not speak, speech may be telegraphic fluent or Wernicke’s aphasia global aphasia ideomotor apraxia--can not demonstrate use of simple objects Visuospatial functioning--some decline is normal with age MMSE affected by educational level median score for 9-12 yrs of school is 26, high school diploma 28 less sensitive in those with high intelligence, and less specific with those below average intelligence Neuropsychological Assessment MMSE is not used to make a formal diagnosis WAIS-R vocabulary holds up with age. Performance part is a more sensitive indicator of brain damage than the verbal part. Depression can impair psychomotor performance, especially visuospatial functioning and timed motor performance. The Geriatric Depression Scale is a useful screening instrument that excludes somatic complaints from its list of items. Mental Disorders of old age Most common: depressive disorders, cognitive disorders, phobias, and alcohol use. High risk of suicide Risk factors include loss of social roles, loss of autonomy, deaths, declining health, increased isolation, financial constraints, and decreased cognitive functioning. Cognitive Disorders Include: Delirium Dementia Amnestic Disorders Psychiatric disorders due to a Medical Condition Postconcussion Syndrome Replaces the term “organic disorders” Note that major psychiatric illnesses may also have changes in cognition, but they are not called cognitive disorders Delirium Usually acute and fluctuating Altered state of consciousness (reduced awareness of and ability to respond to the environment) Cognitive deficits in attention, concentration, thinking, memory, and goal-directed behavior are almost always present Features of delirium May be accompanied by hallucinations, illusions, emotional lability, alterations in the sleep-wake cycle, psychomotor slowing or hyperactivity Usually abrupt Causes of Delirium— I WATCH DEATH Infectious Withdrawal Acute metabolic Trauma CNS Pathology Hypoxia Deficiencies Endocrinopathies Acute vascular Toxins/drugs Heavy Metals Note that prescribed medicines may cause delirium Treatment of delirium Look for underlying cause “always be suspicious” Close supervision, especially by family Reorient frequently Adequate lighting Treatment of delirium (continued) Use consistent personnel Try not to use restraints, as it can worsen confusion. Medication only if behavioral attempts fail Avoid polypharmacy Low dose neuroleptic is treatment of choice, unless the delirium is due to withdrawal. If due to withdrawal, use a short-acting benzodiazepine. ICU Syndrome May be multifactorial Postcardiotomy delirium occurs 3 or 4 days after surgery Changes in dementia Cognition, memory, language Personality change, abstract thinking, aphasias Visuospatial functioning However, level of awareness and alertness usually intact in early stages (differentiates dementia from delirium) Chronic, versus acute Amnestic Disorders Differs from delirium and dementia because major problem is short-term memory only. Impairment may be due to hemorrhage in mamillary bodies, or degenerative changes in the dorsal medial nucleus of the thalamus Most common cause is alcoholism Transient global amnesia Transient inability to learn new info Variable retrograde amnesia that “shrinks” following recovery Level of conscousness and personal identity intact Due to transient vascular insufficiency of the mesial temporal lobe, or medicines, tumors, arrhythmias, cerebral embolism Also have risk problems for stroke Postconcussion syndrome Follows a history of head trauma resulting in cerebral concussion LOC, posttraumatic amnesia, less commonly, post-traumatic seizures Impairment in attention, concentration, performing simultaneous cognitive tasks, and in learning new information, or recalling information shortly after the injury Not a form of dementia Dementing Disorders Only arthritis more common in geriatric population 5% have severe dementia, and 15% mild dementia in those over 65 Over 80, 20% have severe dementia Most common causes: Alzheimer’s disease, vascular dementia, alcoholism, and a combination of these 3 Risk factors are age, family history, and female sex Noncognitive symptoms accompanying dementia Mood disorders--dementia and depressive symptoms can coexist and the depression responds to treatment Pathological laughter and crying occurs Irritability and explosiveness Other noncognitive symptoms in dementia Excessive emotional outbursts that occur after task failure are “catastrophic reactions” and can be avoided by educating family members to avoid confrontation Delusions or hallucinations occur during the course of dementias in nearly 75% Behavior problems in dementia Agitation, restlessness, wandering, violence, shouting Social and sexual disinhibition, impulsiveness Sleep disturbances Dementia and treatable conditions 10-15% from: heart disease, renal disease, and congestive heart failure endocrine disorder, vitamin deficiency, medication misuse primary mental disorders Subcortical dementia Subcortical dementias are associated with movement disorders, gait apraxia, psychomotor retardation, apathy, akinetic mutism. Alert, but slowly responsive and inactive Not fluent in language, but comprehends Often dysarthric, difficulty with forming complex sentences Difficulty with executive function Subcortical dementia Causes: Huntington’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, NPH, multi-infarct dementia, Wilson’s disease Cortical dementias-Ex: Alzheimer’s, CJD, and Pick’s disease Involve aphasia, agnosia, apraxia Fluent, moderately attentive, normally responsive to questions, and normally active in his environment Human prion disease result from dicing mutations of the prion protein gene and may be inherited, acquired, or sporadic. They include familial CJD, GerstmannStraussler-Scheinder syndrome, and fatal familial insomnia. Autosomal dominant Sporadic CJD Accounts for 85% of human prion diseases Occurs world-wide with a uniform distribution and incidence of around 1 in 1 million per annum A mean age of onset of 65 Rare in those less than 30 Dementia of the Alzheimer’s Type (DAT) 50-60% of patients with dementia 5% of those who reach 65 have DAT 15-25% of those 85 or older More common in women Occupy 50% of all NH beds DAT General sequence is memory, language, then visuospatial functions Death occurs in about 7 yrs On autopsy: neurofibrillary tangles and neuritic plaques with an amyloid core and deposition of amyloid in blood vessels Involves cholinergic system arising in basal forebrain, nucleus basalis of Meynert--reductions in brain acetylcholine, and the adrenergic system DAT (Genetics) Chromosome 21 Most severe form associated with chromosome 14 Genetically heterogeneous disease caused by 2 or more genes located on 2 or more chromosomes (14, 19, 21) Slow virus? Deposition of aluminum PET Scans of DAT Decreased metabolic rate of glucose in temporoparietal area, and in frontal regions in more severe cases Pick’s Disease Slowly progressive Focal cortical lesions, primarily frontal that produce aphasia, apraxia, and agnosia. Lasts 2-10 yrs., average duration 5 yrs CJD Usual course one year Not associated with aging Incidence decreases after age 60 Terminal stage: severe dementia, generalized hypertonicity, and profound speech disturbance Typical burst pattern on EEG Vascular Dementia Second most common type Can reduce known risk factors: hypertension, diabetes, cigarette smoking, and arrhythmias Huntington’s Basal ganglia and cerebral cortex Progressive dementia, muscular hypertonicity, and bizarre choreiform movements Death in 15-20 yrs On the G8 fragment of chromosome 4 Screening test available NPH Dementia Ataxia Incontinence Dementia due to Parkinson’s Disease Motor dysfunction, frontal lobe symptoms, and memory deficit Nearly 1/2 are depressed, and depression is most common mental disturbance in Parkinson’s Increased risk for anxiety Levodopa, amantadine, and bromocriptine can cause psychosis and delirium HIV (AIDS)-Related Dementia Involvement of CNS is a primary symptom of the illness and may occur before signs of systemic infection In later stages may be result of fungal, parasitic, viral, or neoplastic disease Initial infection involves the brain-headache, bells palsy, seizures, flu symptoms, or aseptic meningitis Later stages may show abnormal reflexes Other types of dementia Multiple sclerosis is characterized by multifocal lesions in the white matter. May show early mood lability Vitamin B12 deficiency--neurologic changes may occur before megaloblastic changes Hypothyroidism Wilson’s disease Diagnostic evaluation of dementia B12 and folate VDRL and FTA CT/MRI EEG is sensitive for delirium Consent and counseling for HIV Treatment of behavior problems Neuroleptics should not be first choice, unless the patient is psychotic and should be on a “prn” basis Consider the likelihood of depression and anxiety first Consider using behavioral methods if at all possible Medicines for behavioral problems Valproic acid, trazodone, and buspirone may be of benefit BZD’s may aggravate confusion Social Recommendations Refer to Alzheimer’s group or other support groups Continue preventive care--vision, dental, etc. Consider caregiver stress Drug treatment for DAT Most current ones affect acetylcholine Tacrine Aricept Exelon Reminyl Early intervention may prevent or slow decline Depression 15% of all older adult community residences and nursing home patients Accounts for 50% of older adult admissions to a psychiatric facility Age is not a risk factor, but widowhood and chronic medical illness are Depression May have more somatic complaints such as decreased energy, sleep problems, pain, weakness, GI disturbances Increases use of primary care medical resources For those with a medical condition, depressive symptoms significantly reduce survival Increases risk of suicide Depression in medical illness Medicines or the medical illness may cause depression Rule out medical causes Use psychological symptoms such as hopelessness, worthlessness, guilt Pseudodementia occurs in about 15% of depressed older patients, and 25 to 50% of patients with dementia are depressed Depression in older adults May have delusions which are usually persecutory or hypochondriacal in nature Need treatment with both an antidepressant and an antipsychotic ECT may be treatment of choice Bereavement Normal grief starts with shock, proceeds to preoccupation, then to resolution May be prolonged in elderly, but consider major depression if there is marked psychomotor retardation, lasts over 2 months, marked impairment, or if suicidal ideation Bipolar Disorder Episodes persist into old age Do organic workup if onset is over 65 Usually more irritable than euphoric, and paranoid rather than grandiose May have dysphoric mania, with pressured speech, flight of ideas, and hyperactivity, but thought content is morbid and pessimistic Treatment of bipolar Lithium is an effective treatment, but decreased renal clearance and neurotoxic effects may be more common Valproic acid is also helpful for behavioral disturbances Schizophrenia Usually before 45, but there is a late onset type beginning after age 65 More likely in women Paranoid type more common Psychopathology less marked with age Residual type occurs in 30% of those affected: Emotional blunting, social withdrawal, eccentric behavior, and illogical thinking predominate Delusional Disorder Onset between 40 and 55 Persecutory or somatic delusions most common In one study of people older than 65, 4% had pervasive persecutory ideation May be precipitated by stress, loss, social isolation , visual impairment, deafness, immigrant status Anxiety Disorders Very common in elderly May occur first time after age 60, but not usually Most common are phobias, especially agoraphobia Elderly more likely to use anxiolytics May be due to medical causes or depression Somatoform Disorders More than 30% over age 65 have at least one chronic disease. After 75, 20% have diabetes mellitus and an average of 4 diagnosable chronic illnesses Hypochondriasis Hypochondriases peak incidence in 40-50 yr range. Repeat exams, but not invasive and high risk tests Hypochondriasis may be a secondary symptom of depression Alcohol and substance abuse 20% of nursing home patients have alcohol dependence Sudden onset delirium in hospitalized patients usually from withdrawal Consider in patients with GI problems May misuse OTC 35% use analgesics, and 30% use laxatives Alcohol Brain more sensitive as ages Due to changes in metabolism, a given amount may produce a higher blood alcohol level than in a younger individual May worsen normal changes in sleep and sexual functioning Interacts with other medicines Alcohol detoxification Use lorazepam and oxazepam if needed for detox in elderly because of rapid metabolism Personality disorders Borderline, narcissistic, and histrionic personality disorders may become less intense Before diagnosing a personality disorder, verify that it is not an improperly treated Axis I disorder Some personality traits may become more pronounced Sleep disorders Advanced age is single most important factor associated with increased prevalence of sleep disorders REM sleep behavior disorder occurs almost exclusively among elderly men Advanced sleep phase--go to sleep early, and awaken during night Alcohol can interfere with sleep Dementia associated with more arousals, increased stage I sleep; decreased stages 3/4 Other disorders of old age Vertigo--antivert may be of benefit. Usually has psychological component Syncope Elder abuse--about 10% over age 65 abused Psychopharmacology Evaluate physically first, including EKG Bring in all meds Should give meds 3-4 times over 24 hrs. Washout of psychotropic meds sometimes beneficial Major goals are to improve quality of life, maintain in community, and delay or avoid nursing home placement start at lower doses Psychopharmacology Watch for all drug interactions Compliance may be a problem Cognitive dysfunction may require help with medication regimen Metabolism changes Decrease in lean body mass and total body water Increase in body fat, prolongs half life Hepatic metabolism decreases, as well as production of albumin Decreased renal function 25% of all prescriptions are for people over 65 40% of all hypnotics are for over 65 75% of older people use OTC Psychostimulants May be of benefit in depressed older patients Amphetamines may augment analgesia for patients on pain meds Antipsychotics Used for psychosis and behavioral disturbances Can have side effects at lower doses Give a 4 week trial at least No need to use prophylactic antiparkinsonian agents, but the risk of EPS increases with age Antipsychotics Low potency agents (mellaril, thorazine) have increased effects such as orthostatic hypotension, sedation, cognitive impairment Atypicals may be of most benefit (clozapine, olanzapine, risperidone, quetiapine, ziprasidone, aripiprazole) Anxiolytics Rate of use high May cause anterograde amnesia May accumulate in tissues if long acting so may increase ataxia, insomnia, and confusion If necessary, oxazepam and lorazepam are drugs of choice Buspirone may be of benefit. Takes several weeks to work Geriatric psychotherapy Goals are to have minimal complaints, make and keep friends of both sexes, have sex if interested and capable Grief and loss are central issues Example: retirement and self-esteem Group therapy directly lessens the elder’s sense of isolation Family support is crucial Institutional Care 50% stay less than 3 months Skilled nursing facilities vs. intermediatecare facilities 70% proprietary, 30% governmental State hospitals now exclude people with dementia Restraints 40% nursing home patients placed in restraints last year Without restraints, have better muscle tone, less rage, greater sense of mastery Competence Legal decision May be competent for some procedures, and incompetent for others Pearls Evaluate any change in cognition. It is not normal Rule out drug interactions, alcohol abuse, or medical problems if depressed or anxious The dose of antidepressant that gets the patient well is the dose that keeps the patient well Pearls The elderly generally require less medication for the same symptoms--start low, and go slow