Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
DEMENTIA 1/6/16 DR TONY O’BRIEN MD FRCP Dementia Common – 700,000 sufferers in the UK Prevalence increases with age Age 40-65 years 65-70 years 70-80 years 80+ • • • • Prevalence 1 in 100 1 in 50 1 in 20 1 in 5 • • • • Dementia Chronic disorder affecting higher cortical functions, including memory, reasoning, orientation, and communication skills Gradual loss of skills needed to carry out daily activities Progressive Dementia UK Report 2007 Dementia Deficits in Memory and Functional abilities, plus two more categories • Memory • Functional abilities • Language • Perceptual skills • Attention • Constructive abilities • Orientation • Problem solving Not all about memory • 1. Age associated memory impairment • Mild cognitive impairment • Dementia Dementia Diagnosis Neuropsychological assessments – e.g. MMSE, ADAS-cog Clinical examination Collateral history Brain scan Blood tests Distribution pathology in typical AD (Braak and Braak 1991) Focal dementia YOU DO NOT NEED IMAGING TO DISTINGUISH THESE CONDITIONS R PATIENT 2 ALZHEIMER’S PATHOLOGY: PARIETAL LOBE → spatial sx PATIENT 1 ALZHEIMER’S PATHOLOGY: HIPPOCAMPUS → memory sx L PATIENT 3 ALZHEIMERS OR FTD PATHOLOGY: LEFT POSTERIOR SUPERIOR TEMPORAL LOBE → non-fluent aphasia PATIENT 4 FTD PATHOLOGY: LEFT LATERAL TEMPORAL LOBE → fluent aphasia Dementia Alzheimer’s Disease Others Dementia with Lewy Bodies 55 % 5% 15 % Vascular Dementia 20 % Frontotemporal lobe dementias 5% Alzheimer’s Slow insidious onset Progressive decline Early changes in personality – ‘depression’, agitation Positive family history Alzheimer’s - Pathology Loss of cholinergic neurones Amyloid plaques Neurofibrillary tangles of Tau proteins Vascular Dementia Often abrupt onset Step-wise progression Focal neurological signs or symptoms Evidence of cerebrovascular disease on brain scan Emotional lability Early presence of gait disturbance Dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB) Sits somewhere between Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s 2 out of 3 of Spontaneous features of Parkinsonism Visual hallucinations Fluctuating course Supporting features Recurrent falls / syncope Neuroleptic sensitivity - 70 % patients affected Systematized delusions Treatment of Dementia Education, support and signposting to services Disease modifying Symptomatic Drugs for behavioural disturbance Dementia Treatment - Symptomatic Effects vs Slowing Disease Impairment Mild Placebo Symptomatic Disease modifying Severe Baseline Treatment Period End (Ferris, 8/03) Alzheimer’s Disease Cholinesterase inhibitors Donepezil, Rivastigmine, Galantamine Glutamate receptor antagonist Memantine Vascular Dementia Secondary prevention for stroke - Disease Modifying Antiplatelet therapy or anticoagulation if AF Statin Perindopril +/- Indapamide Promote healthy lifestyle with regard to diet, exercise, good diabetic control, smoking cessation, etc. Case Study Arthur has recently attended the memory clinic at the hospital and has been diagnosed with dementia of the ‘mixed type’. Arthur has a mini-mental state examination (MMSE) of 23. He has a background history of hypertension and has fallen twice in the last year. Amitryptiline 50 mg nocte, Simvastatin 20 mg nocte, Zopiclone 7.5 mg nocte, Bendroflumethiazide 2.5 mg od, Aspirin 75 mg od Suggest some possible options for management. The Future • Alzheimer’s: drugs spontaneous to disease-modifying..multidrug • Vascular: earlier recognition and aggressive treatment • Parkinsons: disease modifying drugs: single drug • Legal situation: living will, Preferred priority care / living • Societal moral legal debate for treatment of advanced dementia • Ageism Acknowledgements • • • • Dr John Whitear Geriatrician Dr Lucy Coward Neurologist S/N Christine Timms S/N Jackie Smith