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Dementia syndrome Definitions • The disturbance and symptoms significantly interfere with work or usual social activities or relationships with others • The syndrome associated with a progressive loss of memory and other intellectual functions that is serious enough to interfere with performing the tasks of daily life • The decline in intellectual function, including difficulties with language, simple calculations, planning and judgment, and motor (muscular movement) skills as well as loss of memory Signs and symptoms • loss of cognitive ability – memory – attention – language – problem solving • disorientation in time, in place, in persons • behavioural problems • emotional changes • depression, anxiety, paranoia Causes • neurodegenerative diseases – Alzheimer´s disease – Parkinson´s disease • stroke • trauma • chronic alcohol abuse – Korsakoff´s syndrome • genetic diseases – Huntington disease • metabolic diseases – Tay-Sachs disease – Gaucher disease • infections – Creutzfedt-Jakob disease – viral encephalitis The most frequent: • Alzheimer´s disease 50-60% • Vascular dementia • Dementia with Lewy bodies • Frontotemporal dementia 80% 90% Alzheimer´s disease History 1901 - German psychiatrist Alois Alzheimer identified the first case of what became known as Alzheimer's disease in a 50-year-old woman he called Auguste D (A. Deter). Alzheimer followed her until she died in 1906, when he first reported the case publicly. Alois Alzheimer Auguste D Characteristics 4 stages • Pre-dementia – mild cognitive difficulties – memory loss - remembering recently learned facts and inability to acquire new information – subtle problems with attentiveness, planning, flexibility, abstract thinking • Early dementia – the increasing impairment of learning and memory – difficulties with language - shrinking vocabulary and decreased word fluency – executive functions, perception (agnosia), or execution of movements (apraxia) • Moderate dementia – inability to perform most common activities of daily living – speech difficulties become evident due to an inability to recall vocabulary, which leads to frequent incorrect word substitutions – reading and writing skills are also progressively lost – complex motor sequences become less coordinated - risk of falling increases – memory problems worsen – problems to recognise close relatives – behavioural changes – irritability, lability, aggression – urinary incontinence • Advanced dementia – completely dependent upon caregivers – language is reduced to simple phrases or even single words, or complete loss of speech – extreme apathy and exhaustion – not be able to perform even the most simple tasks without assistance – immobility, they lose the ability to feed themselves – death (infection, pneumonia) Risk factors Higher risk od AD • age 65 – 75 y 3% 75 – 85 y 19% > 85 y 50% • positive family history • • • • low degree of education depression women > men trauma of head Lower risk of AD ?? • antioxidants (ginkgo biloba) ? • estrogens ?? • ibuprofen ?? • smoking ????? Macroscopic changes • brain atrophy – temporal lobe, parietal lobe, frontal cortex, cingulate gyrus • enlargement of ventricles Microscopic changes • loss of neurons and synapses in the cerebral cortex • amyloid plaques • neurofibrillary tangles Amyloid plaques (senile plaques) • dense, mostly insoluble deposits of beta-amyloid peptide outside and around neurons • beta-amyloid - small peptide (39–43 amino acids) • a fragment from the amyloid precursor protein (APP) – a transmembrane protein of neurons • APP is critical to neuron growth, survival and post-injury repair • in Alzheimer's disease, an unknown process (mutation of APP gene?) causes APP to be divided into smaller fragments by enzymes (proteolysis) • accumulation of aggregated amyloid fibrils – toxic disrupting the cell's calcium ion homeostasis, induces apoptosis (hypothesis) Neurofibrillary tangles • aggregates of fibres • hyperfosforylated protein tau - accumulate inside the cells • normal function of tau protein - stabilizes the microtubules (important for transport in neurons) – microtubule-associated protein • in AD - tau is hyperphosphorylated – composes pairs with other threads, creating neurofibrillary tangles and disintegrate the neuron's transport system Other factors • Presenilins 1 and 2 – transmembrane proteins – mutations in Alzheimer disease • Allele e4 of apolipoprotein E – 3 alleles – e2, e3, ee4 – e4 – higher risk of atherosclerosis and Alheimer disease The mini-mental state examination (MMSE) or Folstein test - brief 30-point questionnaire test - used to screen for cognitive impairment. Category Possible Description points Orientation to time 5 From broadest to most narrow. Orientation to time has been correlated with future decline. Orientation to place 5 From broadest to most narrow. This is sometimes narrowed down to streets,[and sometimes to floor.[ Registration 3 Repeating named prompts Attention and calculation 5 Serial sevens, or spelling "world" backwards. It has been suggested that serial sevens may be more appropriate in a population where English is not the first language. Recall 3 Registration recall Language 2 Name a pencil and a watch Repetition 1 Speaking back a phrase Complex commands 6 Varies. Can involve drawing figure shown.