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Cognitive Disorders Add Corporate Logo Here Thomas Bowers, Ph.D. Penn State Harrisburg Contributors • Samuel Adams, an undergraduate, for assisting in preparing the pages and synopses. • Kathy Houseman, laboratory assistant, for helping with the samples. • Donna Marie Struck, a graduate assistant in psychology, for taking the photographs. • Dr. Jay Towfighi, for providing the neuropathology samples. Acknowledgements • These examples are from the Penn State Hershey Medical Center's Neuropathology Laboratory, Hershey, PA, operated under the direction of Dr. Jay Towfighi. Cognitive Disorders • Two fundamental types – I. Delirium - relatively acute state, due to intoxication, withdrawal, poisoning or similar transient source of impairment of consciousness – II. Dementia - more fixed impairment of memory and other higher cognitive processes Dementia • Multiple sources – 1. – 2. – 3. – 4. – 5. Deteriorating disorders Disease processes Head injury Vascular disorders Constitutional impairment Deteriorating Disorders • I. Alzheimer’s disease – Remarkably common • Farmington study estimates incidence of 11% for those over 85 years of age • Progressive atrophy of the cortex, with notable impairment in the hippocampus in particular • Diagnosis by exclusion, definitive diagnosis only on autopsy Deteriorating Disorders • I. Alzheimer’s disease – Decrement in recent memory functioning, probably due to problems in consolidation – Recent appreciation of the role of acetylcholine Example of Alzheimer’s Disease Deteriorating Disorders • II. Pick’s Disease – Relatively rare – Selective atrophy of frontal and temporal regions of the cortex – Unknown cause and etiology Example of Pick’s Disease Deteriorating Disorders • III. Huntington’s Disease – Subcortical impairment, also eventually impacts on cortical functions – Grimacing, unusual and eccentric presentation, gradual deterioration – Some strong genetic components Deteriorating Disorders • IV. Parkinson’s Disease – Deficiency in dopamine (DA) – Tremors, as pill rolling tremors, akinesia (inability to initiate movement) – Late stages impact on frontal region functions Disease Processes • There is a remarkable array of rare infectious processes which impact on the brain • Sources of impairment – 1. Encephalopathy – 2. Encephalitis Disease Processes • I. Meningitis - Inflammation of the outer lining of the brain – Viral - Most common – Bacterial - much more problematic – Relatively common among children, rarer for adults (and far more serious) Disease Processes • II. Herpes Simplex Encephalitis – Sudden clinical course and presentation – Many early deaths until late 1980s – Now largely effectively treated with antiviral medications (as acyclovir) Disease Processes • III. Neurosyphilis – Now extremely rare – Initial presentation mild, maybe asymptomatic – Later manifestation as severe neurological disorders • general paresis - Alzheimer’s like presentation Disease Processes • IV. Lyme encephalopathy - documented memory deficits • V. Creutfeld-Jakob Disease - slow viral agent • VI. Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy - viral demyelinating disorder Disease Processes • VII. HIV and AIDS related dementia complex – Both mild and severe cognitive difficulties could arise – Focus of considerable new research interests AIDS Dementia Complex Disease Processes • VIII. Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) – Controversial area – Severe enough to reduce activity more than 50% below premorbid levels – At least six months – Associated low-grade symptoms, memory dampened Disease Processes • VIII. Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) – Some (but not all) demonstrate EpsteinBarr virus antibodies – Important to rule out other disorders – Often helped by antidepressants and cognitive behavioral therapy for depression – Also display problems in memory and speed of processing not attributable to depression