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P R E S E N T S T H E 27th Annual Alzheimer’s Disease Research Symposium STRATEGIES FOR MANAGING Dementia Care Featured Speakers: Daniel D. Christensen, MD, is Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, Clinical Professor of Neurology, and Adjunct Professor of Pharmacology at the University of Utah School of Medicine in Salt Lake City. William R. Shankle, MS, MD, FACP, is a neurologist specialized in the management of Alzheimer’s disease and related disorders. He is the director of Memory and Cognitive Disorders, Hoag Neurosciences Institute, and the medical director of Shankle Clinic in Newport Beach, California. David Troxel, MPH, has become nationally and internationally known for his writing and teaching in the fields of Alzheimer’s disease and long-term care. He has co-authored four influential books on Alzheimer’s care as well as staff development and training. Maryville College | 502 E. Lamar Alexander Pkwy | Maryville, TN 37804 | 1-800-597-2687 Alzheimer’s Tennessee, Inc. and the Quillen College of Medicine Office of Continuing Medical Education at East Tennessee State University Present The 27th Annual Alzheimer’s Disease Symposium June 20 & 21, 2013 The Clayton Center for the Arts at Maryville College, Maryville, TN ‐ near Knoxville Thursday, June 20 (Day One) “Focus on the Individual with Dementia” Agenda 7:00 AM – 8:00 AM Time 8:00 AM – 8:20 AM 8:20 AM ‐ 9:20 AM 9:20 AM – 9:40 AM 9:40 AM – 10:35 AM Registration and Continental Breakfast Topic Learning Objectives Welcome and Introductions Janice Wade‐Whitehead Executive Director Alzheimer’s Tennessee, Inc. Identify Problems and Stresses in Caring for the Caregiver caregiving Aid caregivers in dealing with the Daniel D. Christensen, M.D. psychological aspects of caregiving Clinical Professor of Psychiatry Clinical Professor of Neurology Adjunct Professor of Pharmacology University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah BREAK Care Transitions: Improving Identify resources and tools to help transition Alzheimer’s patients from Care for Patients with one setting to another Alzheimer’s and Other Improve patient care by implementing Chronic Conditions new knowledge about community‐ based Care Transitions opportunities Melissa Weeks, R.N. QI Specialist Qsource Memphis, TN 10:35 AM – 11:30 AM 11:30 AM – 12:25 PM Getting Through the Emotional Barriers to Help Families Viki Kind, M.A. Clinical Bioethicist KindEthics.com Granada Hills, CA Parting Thoughts: Palliative Care and Hospice for the Dementia Patient Gregory L. Phelps, M.D., M.P.H. Medical Director University of Tennessee Hospice Knoxville, TN 12:25 PM – 1:25 PM 1:25 PM – 2:25 PM Lunch Legal Issues Affecting Persons with Dementia Kelly G. Frere, C.E.L.A. Guyton & Frere, Attorneys Lenoir City, TN The Best Friends Approach to Alzheimer’s Activities David Troxel, M.P.H. Writer and Long‐term Care Consultant Sacramento, CA Break Recognize the legal rights of persons with dementia Define ‘incapacity’ and identify who is responsible for making the determination Understand options for when legal documents do not work Understand options for when there is no responsible party available 3:25 PM – 3:45 PM Understand the role of opioids in treating both pain and dyspnea in the hospice patient Understand how to dose long and short duration opioids and how to adjust the dosages Enumerate at least three steps in Goals of Care discussion and why these discussions are so important List at least three different ways a patient can experience nausea Understand the FAST Scoring system and its role in the timing and appropriateness of referral of a dementia patient to hospice 2:25 PM – 3:25 PM Discover communication strategies to manage denial, anger and guilt Identify how to stay calm when in an emotionally charged interaction Discuss person‐centered approaches to help the family make better decisions for the person with dementia Describe the difference between structured and unstructured activities Name three ways to encourage persons with dementia to participate in activity programming Name three components of an outstanding, contemporary dementia activity program Describe how to get caregiving staff involved in activities 3:45 PM – 4:45 PM 4:45 PM – 4:55 PM Building a Culture of Care in Alzheimer’s Programs David Troxel, M.P.H. Writer and Long‐term Care Consultant Sacramento, CA Wrap up Name three elements of culture change in long‐term care Describe three ways to effectively train and support staff Describe how a positive culture can reduce behavior challenges Describe how a positive work culture can support business success Alzheimer’s Tennessee, Inc. and the Quillen College of Medicine Office of Continuing Medical Education at East Tennessee State University Present The 27th Annual Alzheimer’s Disease Symposium The Clayton Center for the Arts at Maryville College, Maryville, TN ‐ near Knoxville Friday, June 21 (Day Two) “Focus on the Science” Agenda 7:00 AM – 8:00 AM Time 8:00 AM – 8:10 AM Registration and Continental Breakfast Topic Learning Objectives Welcome and Introductions Janice Wade‐Whitehead Executive Director Alzheimer’s Tennessee, Inc. 8:10 AM – 9:10 AM The Amnestic Dutchman Daniel D. Christensen, M.D. Clinical Professor of Psychiatry Clinical Professor of Neurology Adjunct Professor of Pharmacology University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah Vital Brain Aging: An Approach to Cognitive Health Care William R. Shankle, M.S., M.D., FACP Director of Memory and Cognitive Disorders Program, Hoag Neurosciences Institute; Medical Director, Shankle Clinic Newport Beach, CA Break 9:10 AM – 10:10 AM 10:10 AM – 10:20 AM Recognize early signs and symptoms of Alzheimer’s Disease Appreciate the course of Alzheimer’s Disease from diagnosis to autopsy Recognize risk factors for ADRD and the importance of managing these risk factors Recognize underlying medical conditions associated with memory loss and other types of cognitive impairment. Understand importance of early detection of memory loss Understand different types of treatment options for different types of ADRD 10:20 AM – 11:10 AM 11:10 AM – 11:55 AM 11:55 AM – 12:50 PM 12:50 PM – 1:40 PM 1:40 PM – 2:30 PM Differential Diagnosis in Dementia John H. Dougherty, Jr., M.D. Medical Director Cole Neuroscience Center, University of Tennessee Medical Center Knoxville, TN Falling Down: Falls and Gait Disorders in Older Adults Monica K. Crane, M.D. Clinical Assistant Professor of Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Tennessee Medical Center‐ Knoxville, Associate Director, Senior Assessment Clinic Director of Research, Cole Neuroscience Center Knoxville, TN Lunch Lewy Body Dementia Challenges and Management Karen A. Mullins, D.O. Physician Knoxville Neurology Clinic Knoxville, TN Frontotemporal Dementia Update: Diagnosis and Management Monica K. Crane, M.D. Clinical Assistant Professor of Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Tennessee Medical Center‐ Understand the differential diagnosis of the primary degenerative dementias Have a working knowledge of the secondary causes of dementia Understand the prevalence and clinical importance of falls Understand the risk factors for falls Know how to conduct an office gait assessment Become familiar with different gait disorders associated with falls Understand criteria for diagnosis of LBD Understand challenges of treatment of LBD Appropriately treat and manage LBD Understand the prevalence of FTD Understand key symptoms associated with behavioral variant FTD Review new genetic associations in FTD Discuss treatment options for FTD 2:30 PM – 2:45 PM 2:45 PM – 3:35 PM 3:35 PM – 4:20 PM Knoxville, Associate Director, Senior Assessment Clinic Director of Research, Cole Neuroscience Center Knoxville, TN Break Parkinson’s Disease and Premotor Symptoms Michelle L. Brewer, M.D. Knoxville Neurology Clinic Knoxville, TN Speaker Panel John Dougherty, Jr., M.D., Medical Director, Cole Neuroscience Center, University of Tennessee Medical Center, Knoxville, TN Monica K Crane, M.D., Clinical Assistant Professor of Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Tennessee Medical Center‐ Knoxville; Associate Director, Senior Assessment Clinic; Director of Research, Cole Neuroscience Center, Knoxville, TN Nancy Britcher, L.C.S.W., Knoxville, TN 4:20 PM – 4:30 PM Open discussion Wrap Up and Evaluation 27th Annual Alzheimer’s Disease Symposium June 20‐21, 2013 The Clayton Center for the Arts at Maryville College, Maryville, TN Activity Director Target Audience Overall Conference Objectives Funding John H. Dougherty, Jr., M.D. Medical Director, Cole Neuroscience Center, University of Tennessee Medical Center‐ Knoxville, Knoxville, TN Target Audience: Family Medicine Physicians, Internal Medicine Physicians, Neurologists, Psychiatrists, Advanced Practice Nurses, Physician Assistants, Psychologists, Nurses, Nursing Home Administrators and Social Workers Learning Objectives: As a result of participating in this activity, the attendee should be able to……. Describe the process of deterioration in the patient and the caregiver over the course of the disease Describe the meaning and requirements of Patient Centered Care for Dementia Patients as defined by CMS Describe the impact of exercise on patients with early, middle and late stage dementia Describe the impact on the brain of listening and performing music and its role in preventing or postponing symptoms of dementia Describe three problem solving strategies that can be used to deal with problem behaviors in dementia patients Define and describe appropriate actions related to the legal issues experienced by dementia patients and their families Cite the currently emerging research evidence in the diagnosis and treatment of dementia Define steps in the differential diagnosis in Alzheimer’s type dementia including current strategies of management Define and differentiate between cognitive testing and AV45 in dementia diagnosis Describe the presentation, disease course and management of Lewy Body Type Dementia Describe the premotor symptoms of Parkinson’s disease including how it facilitates diagnosis Describe sleep disturbances in dementia patients, including management strategies The funding of this educational activity has been provided by the Ohio Valley Appalachia Regional Geriatric Education Center (OVAR). OVAR, a four university consortium, was established to provide education and training opportunities for health professionals and other personnel in order to enhance the availability and the quality of health care for older adults in the Appalachian Region. The OVAR/GEC is a national geriatric education initiative funded by the USDHHS, Health Resources and Services Administration, US Public Health Service, Bureau of Health Professions. Disclosure Information and Potential Conflicts of Interest Potential Conflicts of Interest East Tennessee State University’s Quillen College of Medicine, Office of Continuing Medical Education (OCME) holds the standard that its continuing medical education programs should be free of commercial bias and conflict of interest. It is the policy of the OCME that each presenter and planning committee member of any CME activity must disclose any significant financial interest/arrangement or affiliation with corporate organizations whose products or services are being discussed in a presentation. All commercial support of an educational activity must also be disclosed to the conference attendees. Speakers and Planning Committee Members with No Potential Conflict of Interest: Each of the following speakers and planning committee members have completed a disclosure form indicating that they or members of their immediate family do not have a financial interest/arrangement or affiliation that could be perceived as a real or apparent conflict of interest related to the content or supporters involved with this activity: • Alexander Osmand, Ph.D. (Planning Committee) None None Linda Johnson (Planning Committee) • Viki Kind, M.A. (Speaker) None None Karen A. Mullins, D.O. (Speaker) None Gregory Phelps, M.D. (Speaker) • Janice Wade‐Whitehead (Planning Committee) None None Pat Myrick (Conference Planner) None Patty Warner, L.C.S.W. (Planning Committee) • Becky Dodson (Planning Committee) None None Lisa Oglesby, Ph.D., M.S.C.P., C.B.S.M. (Planning Committee) • Lea Ann Patrizio, L.C.S.W. (Planning Committee) None • David Troxel, M.P.H. (Speaker) None • Missy Weeks, R.N. (Speaker) None • Nancy Britcher, L.C.S.W. (Speaker) None • Kelly Frere, C.E.L.A. (Speaker) None • Stanley Boling, R.N., B.S.N., M.S., C.N.A., C.H.E. (Planning Committee) None Speakers and Planning Committee Members with Potential Conflict of Interest: Each of the following speakers and planning committee members have completed a disclosure form indicating that they or members of their immediate family do have a financial interest/arrangement or affiliation that could be perceived as a real or apparent conflict of interest related to the content or supporters involved with this activity. All of their presentations have been peer reviewed and found to be balanced, evidence based, and free of commercial bias. Grant/Research Support: Cole John H. Dougherty Jr., M.D. (Activity Neuroscience Center Director and Speaker) Other Remuneration: Novartis Consultant Fees/Salary: Clarity Point Alzheimer’s Treatments Center Advisory Board: Summitt Foundation Ownership/Partnership: Co‐Owner Interactive Education Daniel D. Christensen, M.D. (Speaker) Other Remuneration: Eisai/Pfizer Other Remuneration: Pfizer, Forest, Monica K. Crane, M.D. (Planning Novartis Committee and Speaker) Advisory Board: Alzheimer’s Tennessee Ownership/Partnership: Husband, Luke Accreditations: AAFP Prescribed Credits NAB Credit NASWTN CEUs Madigan, KOC Partner Grant Research/Support: UniHealth Foundation Other Remuneration: Forest Pharma Major Stock/Shareholder: Medical Care Corporation ACCME Accreditation: Quillen College of Medicine, East Tennessee State University, is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education to provide continuing medical education for physicians. William R. Shankle, M.S., M.D., F.A.C.P. (Speaker) CME Credit: Quillen College of Medicine, East Tennessee State University designates this live activity for a maximum of 14.00 AMA PRA Category 1 CreditsTM. Physicians should only claim credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity. Joint Sponsorship: This activity has been planned and implemented in accordance with the Essential Areas and policies of the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) through the joint sponsorship of the Quillen College of Medicine at East Tennessee State University and Alzheimer’s Tennessee, Inc. Quillen College of Medicine is accredited by the ACCME to provide continuing medical education for physicians. CNE CREDIT: 14.00 Continuing Nursing Education Contact Hours for this conference. East Tennessee State University College of Nursing is an approved provider of continuing nursing education by the Tennessee Nurses Association, an accredited approver by the American Nurses Credentialing Center’s Commission on Accreditation. This event is presented by the Quillen College of Medicine Office of Continuing Medical Education, the College of Nursing Office of Continuing Education at East Tennessee State University, and Alzheimer’s Tennessee, Inc. This live activity, 27th Annual Alzheimer’s Disease Symposium, with a beginning date of 06/20/2013, has been reviewed and is acceptable for up to 14.00 Prescribed credit(s) by the American Academy of Family Physicians. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity. The TN Department of Health Office of EMS recognizes this Symposium for fifteen (15) hours of continuing education contact hours for renewal. Application for NAB credit has been filed with the National Continuing Education Review Service (NCERS) of the National Association of Long Term Care Administrator Boards (NAB). Determination of credit is pending. This program was approved by the National Association of Social Workers – Tennessee Chapter (Provider Number: NASWTN 2013‐0076) for 14.00 continuing education units. Handouts Transcripts of CME Credit Conference Planner Handouts provided by presenters prior to the conference have been included in the syllabus. Please note that all presenters may not have given permission for their slides to be shared or may not have provided handouts prior to the conference and may instead bring with them for distribution at the time of their presentation. Available presentations are available for downloading and viewing at http://www.etsu.edu/cme CME Transcripts: Please note that CME certificates will NOT be issued for this conference. Your credits will be added to your TRANSCRIPT which is maintained in the ETSU Office of CME. You may print your transcript at any time through our website at http://www.etsu.edu/com/cme/transcripts.aspx. Please allow 3 weeks from the conference date before expecting to see your credits on your transcript. If you need a record of your credits sooner, please contact us at 423‐439‐8027. Pat Myrick Senior Educational Planner Quillen College of Medicine East Tennessee State University 423‐439‐8074 [email protected] If you have questions, concerns, or comments about this activity, please contact: Barbara J. Sucher, M.B.A. Associate Dean for CME [email protected] or 423‐439‐8081 The 27th Annual Alzheimer’s Disease Symposium June 20, 2013 (Day One) “Focus on the Individual with Dementia” 8:20 AM – 9:20 AM ‘Caring for the Caregiver’ Daniel D. Christensen, M.D. Clinical Professor of Psychiatry Clinical Professor of Neurology Adjunct Professor of Pharmacology University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah Identify problems and stresses in caregiving Aid caregivers in dealing with the psychological aspects of caregiving Notes: 6/3/2013 Caring for the Caregiver: A 20-year Video Case History Daniel D. Christensen, M.D. Clinical Professor of Psychiatry Clinical Professor of Neurology Adjunct Professor of Pharmacology University of Utah Alzheimer’s Disease Number of patients J Okla State Med Assn, 1994:87 Neurology Aug. 2003 Percent of adult Americans who fear: 38% 20% 13% 14% 9% Diabetes Stroke Heart Disease Alzheimer’s Cancer MetLife Foundation Survey, 2006 1 6/3/2013 Do you fear becoming responsible for someone with AD ? 44% 36% 62% 13% 5% Not at all Somewhat Very Extremely MetLife Foundation Survey, 2006 Alzheimer’s Disease Projected Caregivers – 28 Million Projected Patients – 14 Million Alzheimer’s Disease Caregivers (2005) U.S. AD caregivers – 9,820,205 29% of all older caregivers (>60) About ¼ provide > 40 hrs of care /week 32% sustain this level > 5 years AD: Facts & Figures, 2007 2 6/3/2013 Who are AD Caregivers? 50% 40% Spouse Child 10% Other J AM Geriatric Soc 2006:54, 796-803 Who are AD Caregivers? 40% 50% Spouse 75% Women 57% Work full or part-time Child 10% Other Average age: Caring for spouse - 69 Caring for parent - 52 Alzheimer’s Caregiving in the U.S., Alzheimer’s Association, 2004 Investigating caregivers attitudes and needs, Harris Interactive, 2006 Living arrangements of AD patients 64% Caregiver 20% LTC 10% Supervisor 6% Alone CHS Alzheimer’s Disease Caregiver Project, Wave 6, 2004 3 6/3/2013 Caregivers commonly (83%) express regret over how long they waited to get medical help after noticing the first cognitive chamges. 40% had waited a year or longer and some as long as 5 years. Why they waited: 45% Thought it was “normal aging” 25% Didn’t recognize the signs of AD 11% Didn’t know any treatment existed for Alzheimer’s Disease Caregiver Burden A sum of the financial, physical and emotional effects of providing care for one with a disabling condition Caregiver Burden - AD Problems contributing most: Wandering Agitation Violence / Aggression Difficulty with basic ADL’s 4 6/3/2013 Caregiver Burden Effect on Caregiver’s Quality of Life* With patients living at home significant negative effect on: Recreation (Free time) 54% Emotional health & mental well-being 47% Social life 42% Finances 39% Overall quality of life 36% Physical health 31% % 2007 AD Caregiver Study VII, August 2007 GFK Market Measures, N=218 *Percentages = Top 2 box rating of a 7 point scale Caregiver Burden Important variables in the caregiver: Coping strategies/abilities Self esteem/Self-efficacy Social support Financial resources Health status Age & functional limitations Past relationship with the patient Caregiver Burden 55% 49% 40% 33% Less time for Give up hobbies, Report high levels vacations or family and social activities of distress friends Less exercise 5 6/3/2013 Changing Caregiver Demands Mild Independence Finances Driving Moderate Decisions Supervision Clothing IADL’s Severe Daily care Basic ADL’s The “Ideal” Caregiver Good understanding of the diagnosis Good understanding of the patient’s condition Realistic expectations for outcome Realistic expectations for care burdens Regular visits & compliance with treatment Provision for personal needs Adaptive personality with optimistic outlook Necessary resources for adequate treatment Good working relationship with Dr. & staff Caregiver Burden Scale 22 items Rated 0 (never) to 4 (nearly always) Scoring: Burden severity 0 – 20 Little 21 – 40 Mild 41 – 60 Moderate 61 – 88 Severe Zant et al, Gerontologist 1980;20:649-655 6 6/3/2013 AD Caregivers Poorer self-rated health Increased depressive symptoms (15 – 32%) Increased anxiety symptoms (4 – 24%) More use of psychotropic medications Increased risk of death (60%) Ann Intern Med 1994;120:126-132 J Am Geriatr Soc 1990;38:227-235 Am Fam Physician 2000;62:2613 – 2622 JAMA 1999;282:2215-2219 Caregiver Burden “Most difficult is seeing him lose his ability to function” Significant numbers endorsed: Caregiving is stressful and life changing I worry about the costs I don’t have as much time for myself I exercise less I have felt abandoned Investigating caregivers attitudes and needs, Harris Interactive, 2006 Caregiver Burden What would make your caregiving burden easier? More day-to-day help More financial support More emotional support More time for myself More information / education Investigating caregivers attitudes and needs, Harris Interactive, 2006 7 6/3/2013 Predictors of Nursing Home Placement Patient variables Severity of cognitive impairment Level of functional impairment Behavioral problems Caregiver variables Caregiver burden Risk factor for Early Placement into Nursing Home Care Not having a daughter Elder Abuse Physical, psychological, sexual, financial Prevalence estimates (all elderly): 1 - 4% (with dementia): 5 – 12% Risk factors (patient): Advanced age, frailty, impaired ADLs, dementia, behavior problems Risk factors (caregiver): Substance abuse, psychopathology, high caregiver burden, Family Hx of abuse Coyne, Geriatric Times Vol 2 No 4, 2001 8 6/3/2013 Caregiver time burden Reduced caregiver time assisting with ADLs Donepezil Study 52.4 minutes per day (p=.004) Galantamine Study 32 minutes per day (p=.011) Memantine Study 92 minutes per day (p=.01) J Am Geriatr Soc 2003;51:737-744 Int J Geriatr Psychiatry 2003;18:942-950 Pharmacoeconomics 2003;21:327-340 Caregiver time burden Change in caregiver time Spent assisting with ADLs (n=290, MMSE 5 – 17) 60 minutes per day 40 Donepezil 5-10mg/day Placebo 20 0 -20 -40 -60 0 4 12 Study Week 24 Coping Tips for Caregivers Get educated about dementia Get help for caregiving tasks Protect personal time for things you enjoy Make time for exercise Eat well – regular / nutritious Get sufficient sleep Maintain a network of family and friends Use available help such as respite care and adult day care 9 6/3/2013 Interventions for the Caregiver Alzheimer’s Association www.alz.org 1-800-272-3900 Links to: American Association for Homes and Services for the Aging Assisted Living Federation of America Long Term Care Ombudsman Medicare’s Nursing Home Compare Interventions for the Caregiver Optimal AD management should always explicitly take into account the welfare and well-being of the caregiver Too often forgotten Are few validated studies (Most have focused on Depression/Anxiety) Interventions for the Caregiver Patient interventions “Cognitive medication” “Behavioral medications” Caregiver interventions Education Behavior management strategies Communication skills Support groups Respite care Adult Daycare Family therapy Community resources 10 6/3/2013 Interventions for the Caregiver Study of 206 caregiver/spouses of AD patients randomized to two groups: 1. Six counseling sessions plus a caregiver support group 2. No counseling or support group Outcome: Nursing Home placement in Group 1 was delayed by 329 days as compared to Group 2 (p=0.02) JAMA 1996;276:1725-1731 Interventions for the Caregiver 18 types of psychological interventions evaluated for evidence of effectiveness: Exercise, Validation therapy, Family counseling, Environmental manipulation, Sensory stimulation, Cognitive stimulation therapy, Behavioral management, Music therapy, Reminiscence therapy, Therapeutic Activity, Snoezelen Therapy, Montessori Activities Teaching caregivers how to change their interactions with the patient Am J Psych 2005;162:1996-2021 E-Mental Health The use of technology to improve mental health Initially, most interventions used the telephone Since: DVD/Video – Video Respite CD Interactive – Caregiver’s Friend Web Site – Link2Care Alz On Line Mastery Over Dementia 11 6/3/2013 www.videorespite.com Mastery Over Dementia Web-based education / support for dementia caregivers Large efficacy study is underway Lessons: 1. Coping with behavior problems 2. Coping with care problems 3. Time for yourself 4. Thinking and feeling 5. Non-helping thoughts 6. Helping thoughts 7. Assertiveness 8. Communication and ongoing suport National Alliance for Caregiving Annual Meeting July 20 – 23, 2008 Nashville Tennessee 12 6/3/2013 “Caregiver Gain” Satisfaction Personal growth Life enhancement/enrichment Personal meaning Am J Geriatr Psychiatry 14:8 August 2006 Complicated Grief 1. A sense of disbelief regarding the death 2. Anger and bitterness over the death 3. Recurrent painful emotions with yearning and longing for the deceased 4. Preoccupation with thoughts of the loved one, including distressing intrusive thoughts related to the death 13 6/3/2013 Predictors of Complicated Grief Study: 217 caregivers who experienced the death of their family member Results: 20% experienced “complicated grief ” (score of 30 or more on “Inventory of Complicated Grief ”) Predictors of Complicated Grief: High levels of preloss depression High levels of preloss caregiver burden Higher levels of patient cognitive impairment More positive feelings about the caregiving experience Suggested interventions (preloss): Reduce caregiver burden & depression by: Antidepressant medication / treatment Caregiver support groups Skills training Education About 50% of the complicated grief cases resolved without specific interventions within 12 months “When caregivers know that their relative is on a trajectory toward death, they are better able to cope with the death when it occurs.” Am J Geriatr Psych 2006;14;8 650-658 14 9:40 AM – 10:35 AM ‘Care Transitions: Improving Care for Patients with Alzheimer’s and other Chronic Conditions’ Melissa Weeks, R.N. QI Specialist Qsource Memphis, TN Identify resources and tools to help transition Alzheimer’s patients from one setting to another Improve patient care by implementing new knowledge about community‐ based Care Transitions opportunities Notes: 6/3/2013 Care Transitions: Improving Care for Patients with Alzheimer’s and Other Chronic Conditions Qsource June 20, 2013 Scope of the Readmissions Problem 1 in 5 Medicare patients discharged from a hospital has a readmission within 30 days 3/4 are preventable = $12 billion in annual Medicare spending 2/3 Medicare (FFS) medical discharges are re‐hospitalized or dead within a year 1/2 Medicare (FFS) surgical discharges are re‐hospitalized or dead within a year Readmissions Project Overview Qsource undertook a project to describe geographic patterns of healthcare utilization focusing on readmissions within 6 Metropolitan Hospital Referral Regions (HRRs) across Tennessee The overall purpose has been to engage community stakeholders in discussions around shared accountability for population health outcomes and healthcare expenditures Qsource has also supported communities interested in federal and state funding by providing assistance in root cause analyses and interventional approaches Those communities that are not funded but want to engage in continued work to improve transitions will have continued support with the statewide Learning & Action Network 1 6/3/2013 Conceptual Foundation Triple Aim concept Improve health among all patients receiving hospital care Improve care that is responsive to the needs of all patients in a hospital service area Reduce expenditures for unnecessary readmissions “Hot spotter” work of Dr. Jeffrey Brenner in Camden, NJ Targeting resources toward the few individuals that account for a significant portion of readmission expenditures Re‐conceptualizing the problem of readmissions based on work by Dr. Eric Coleman and others Towards a comprehensive perspective that extends beyond the 4 walls of a hospital and is patient‐centered Why Are People Readmitted? Provider‐Patient interface Unmanaged condition worsening Use of suboptimal medication regimens Return to an emergency department Unreliable system support Lack of standard and known processes Unreliable information transfer Unsupported patient activation during transfers No Community Infrastructure for Achieving Common Goals 5 It’s Not a Hospital Project… It’s a Community Project 6 2 6/3/2013 National Demographics CY 2009 Facts about Transitions of Care: 21% of hospitalized patients 65 or older are discharged to an LTC or other institution Approximately 25% of Medicare SNF residents are readmitted to the hospital Patients with chronic conditions (an expected 125 million in the U.S. by 2020) see up to 16 physicians in one year 41.9‐70% of Medicare patients admitted receive services from an average of 10 or more physicians with each admission 7 Tennessee HRR Demographics CY 2009 Community Readmissions: 868,408 total Medicare beneficiaries (including those in other states contiguous to the HRR) 127,528 (15%) Medicare beneficiaries had at least one inpatient admission for which they were discharged alive 24,404 (19%) of these individuals experienced 1 or more readmissions for a total of 36,820 total readmissions Readmissions accounted for $309 million in Medicare expenditures in one year for the five regions 8 Demographics Summary Each readmission represents a breakdown in care, a patient safety concern, and an opportunity to eliminate wasteful spending Community rates of readmissions are a better indicator of healthcare delivery system functioning Our goal is to help set a priority for the community to focus energy as a unit and break down silos Opportunities to focus on system‐level changes while targeting scarce resources toward patients for whom the current delivery system works least well must be addressed 9 3 6/3/2013 2009 Rates of Readmission per 1,000 Medicare Patients Across Tennessee Health Referral Regions 2009–2010 Change in Readmission Rates per 1,000 Medicare Patients in Tennessee HRRs Per Capita Expenditures for Readmissions in Tennessee HRRs 4 6/3/2013 Community Approach 6 communities statewide was original goal As of June 2013, 9 communities organized, more communities showing interest 2 communities have received formal funding Qsource continues to work with all interested communities on developing projects/plans to improve health of our residents and reduce hospital readmissions A Regional View West Tennessee 2 communities currently involved in project‐Jackson and Memphis Multiple hospitals, SNFs, home health providers, and other community agencies collaborating on ongoing projects ESRD network working diligently with this group Very engaged group willing to remove silos and work across all disciplines to improve outcomes Continuing to develop projects to improve transitions and healthcare quality in this region A Regional View Middle Tennessee 4 communities currently involved in project‐Columbia, East Nashville, Vanderbilt/NHC, Upper‐Cumberland Vanderbilt/NHC community awarded Innovations Grant Multiple hospital systems and providers involved Strong partnerships formed with home health providers in this region Communities working across rural and urban settings to improve care in this region 5 6/3/2013 A Regional View East Tennessee 3 communities currently involved in project‐Chattanooga, Knoxville, Tri‐Cities Chattanooga awarded 3026 funding Diverse communities across region with strong AAA leadership for all communities Multiple hospital systems collaborating in this region to improve care All communities involved in multiple projects and forming committees to carry out plans developed for this region Models for Action Models for intervention in place statewide Care Transitions Intervention Project RED Project BOOST Bridge Model STAAR Transitional Care Model INTERACT Important Tools For Patients With A Cognitive Decline Personal Health Record (PHR)‐My Health Record: http://www.ntocc.org/Portals/0/PDF/Resources/Taking_Care_of_My_ Health_Care.pdfProject RED Current and updated medication list at every interaction Interaction with Identified Caregiver at each interaction and with any change to regimen Tools for Family and Caregivers http://www.thefamilycaregiver.org/caregiving_resources/ 6 6/3/2013 Community-Based Summary Points Removing silos, breakdown of barriers between hospital systems and all providers of care vital to project Community rate of readmission is a better indicator of healthcare delivery system functioning ‐ community involvement is key Our goal is to help set a priority for the community to focus energy as a unit and break down silos Opportunity to focus on system‐level changes while targeting scarce resources toward patients for whom the current delivery system works least well Next Steps Join a community in your region If not already completed in your facility: Patient interviews and outreach to identify root causes Explore local provider knowledge of readmission breakdowns using the data that Qsource provides Drill down on patterns associated with: Admission source Discharge destination Primary diagnosis Community Hot Spots Development of a community plan and alignment with other initiatives Combine community resources to effectively address care transitions Care Transitions NCC 7 6/3/2013 Safe Transitions Across Tennessee www.Qsource.org/STAT Safe Transitions Across Tennessee Qsource analyzed geographic healthcare claims data and produced six regional readmission reports: Memphis, Jackson, Nashville, Chattanooga, Knoxville and Tri‐Cities. We are now engaging community stakeholders to share innovative approaches for improving care coordination and identifying root causes of the variations found in the readmissions data. Find a copy of our regional referral reports at: http://www.qsource.org/readmission_reports_map Safe Transitions Across Tennessee www.Qsource.org/STAT 8 6/3/2013 Qsource would like to recognize the assistance of the University of Tennessee Health Science Center in developing the regional reports. Missy Weeks, RN Qsource QI Specialist/ East Tennessee Region 865.771.1772 [email protected] This presentation was prepared by Qsource, the Medicare Quality Improvement Organization (QIO) for Tennessee, under a contract with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), a federal agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHS). Contents do not necessarily reflect CMS policy. 12.ICPC.09.042 9 10:35 AM – 11:30 AM ‘Getting Through the Emotional Barriers to Help Families’ Viki Kind, M.A. Clinical Bioethicist KindEthics.com Granada Hills, CA Discover communication strategies to manage denial, anger and guilt Identify how to stay calm when in an emotionally charged interaction Discuss person‐centered approaches to help the family make better decisions for the person with dementia Notes: B LIFE O DEATH T H BIRTH C S Getting Through the Emotional Barriers to Help Families Viki Kind, MA [email protected] www.KindEthics.com www.TheCaregiversPath.com (805) 807-4474 1 Viki Kind has no financial conflicts of interest. 2 What Was Going Through Her Mind? Amygdala and Hippocampus both got activated (emotional areas of brain). Amygdala remembers previous emotions. Hippocampus remembers the details/context of the scene. Amygdala scans everything that is coming in to look for trouble. If it finds something, it fires off a surge of adrenalin. Because the amygdala works faster than our rational brain, it sets off alarms before we can think about our actions When this emotional reaction gets triggered, it takes less than 90 seconds for the reaction to surge through our body and then it is completely out of our blood stream. The neocortex (rational area of the brain) gets to work right after amygdala has fired off the initial reaction Christine Wilding 3 1 Controlling Our Reactions “Response – ability: The ability to choose to respond to stimulation coming in through our sensory system at any moment in time.” Dr. Jill Taylor Bolte You have the power to choose your next reaction Do you want to escalate and create another surge or do you want to let the first strong reaction flow by? We can’t control the first surge, but we can control what happens next in our mind and body We can’t control our first reaction but we can control our outward response 4 Listening to Calm, then Problem Solve We can listen faster than we can talk. We listen at 500-600 words per minute We talk at 200 words per minute. This leaves a lot of time for us to get distracted We might practice “skip thinking” - thinking ahead to what you are going to say next? We might “tune out” while the person is explaining his or her point of view? We need to be fully present and patient with process That is why we use minimal continuers or encouragers Uh huh, go on, tell me more, I see, right, etc. 5 Listening for the Non-Verbal Message What message are you hearing/seeing? 7% of message is our words 38% by vocal tone 55% by non-verbal signals like body position, gestures, etc. What message are you sending? Do you look like you are listening/“attending”?: Lean forward, nod, open body position, move naturally, don’t fidget, eye contact, demonstrate relaxed alertness You will know it’s working if the person is calming down 6 2 Compassion is the ability to feel your pain in my heart Unknown author 7 Acknowledge and Validate Acknowledge and validate what you are hearing (even though you might think the person is wrong for believing this or acting this way) Being heard is healing, comforting and calming Say back what you have heard:” “That must have been so scary.” “You must have been so hurt, angry, … by that.” “That must have been very difficult.” “It must be so hard to feel criticized all the time.” “I can see how mad/sad you are about this.” “It really hurt your feelings when she did/said that.” • • • 8 Normalize the Feelings/Perceptions Test if you have heard/understood the person correctly: I have heard from many seniors that they are afraid of the what the future holds. (You are opening up the door to explore a scary topic.) Some of the seniors I work have tried is… What do you think about this? (normalizing, educating and partnering to give control) For some of the families I work with, talking about these issues brings up .… How is this discussion going for you? (validating, exploring and normalizing that strong feelings may be coming up.) I often see how difficult this is for my clients/the families to …. Is there anything I can do to make it better/easier for you? (validating, normalizing, opening up space for discussion.) 9 3 Calming the Other Person Down Stop and check in with yourself Use the person’s name and a calm, steady voice Encourage: “I’d like to hear/understand what happened.” Express your desire to solve the problem: “I want to find a way to make this better for your dad.” Provide a minor choice to short-circuit the person’s emotional surge: “Would you like to talk here or go somewhere else? Can I get you a glass of water?” If person still in a high emotional state, offer an alternative: “Maybe we can each take a moment to catch our breath?” Stay calm so you can keep listening. Don't try to educate or talk rationally until person is calmer. 10 If Fear has Taken Over Listen to calm and understand the problem Find out how he/she has problem-solved in past: “How do you usually know if you are making a good decision?” (I think, I feel, I ask others, I pray, …) “What has worked for you in the past when you had to make a decision?” We can ask the person to “try on” the decision for a few days and let us know what they think “Pretend you have made the decision and live with it for a few days. See how you feel about it and if it is right for you. If you realize it is the wrong decision, then try on a different answer.” 11 Why Are People Not Accepting Our Help and Advice? Don’t agree with how you define the problem Don’t agree with the plan Illiteracy and medical illiteracy Grief, denial, fear and frustration Pain and fatigue Financial Cultural/Religious values Irresponsible Mental illness Person does not have decisional capacity Substance abuse Family roles and interpersonal conflicts We are asking them to make decisions faster than they are able Anger at others because angry with situation Being controlling because can’t control the situation Poor communication 12 4 Understanding the Real Problem Position vs. Interests Position is what the person says he/she wants Interest is what the person really wants You won’t be able to solve the problem until you understand the reasons and values beneath their position. What is their real interest? I want or don’t want _____ because __X__. We need to discover what __X__ represents to them. Then we will be able to find a solution which will meet this underlying interest. 13 Separate the Person from the Problem Stops the conflict from being one person against the other Creates a shared decision making partnership Say, “How are you and I going to solve the _____ problem.” The person stops being the problem and creates a third person in the room called, “The Problem.” This stops the arguing and frees up the two people to work together to brainstorm possible solutions 14 5-Step Process to Help the Person/Family Get Out of Denial At any point in the conversation, you may need to stop and allow the person to process what you have said. You may need to come back later to finish the 5-steps, if the person is willing. Step 1: Normalize: “So many of the families/patients I work with struggle to take in all the information that is coming their way. It can be really overwhelming.” Step 2: Introduce denial gently: “Especially when it is bad news. Everyone wishes that what the doctor is saying isn’t true.” 15 5 Step 3: Introduce the idea of denial being both good and bad: “This wishing it wasn’t true can be both good and bad. In the short term, denial can protect the person from the pain of hearing the bad news. (It keeps the person’s brain from exploding.)” “But in the long term, denial can be really bad because it can keep the person from...” Seeing the changes in the person Asking for help from family, friends, faith community and professionals Getting proper medical care Helping the person have a meaningful, profound and dignified dying experience 16 Step 4: If the person hasn’t shut down and is still listening, you can try option A or B Option A: “I wonder if you would be willing to talk about ___ for 15 minutes. Then you can not think about ___ for the rest of the day.” Option B: Introduce the concept of disbelief by asking an “if” question: “If ___ were going to die, would he want to go home or stay here in the hospital?” Alternate: “Does it ever cross your mind that ___?” Step 5: To move into decision making: Ask a second “if” question but be careful because coming out of denial is painful and the person will be emotionally fragile: “If ___ were to help him go home, would you like some information about this now or later today when your family can be here with you?” 17 I Don’t Want to Have to Take Over! Appropriate guilt vs. Inappropriate guilt Ask, “Did you actually do something wrong?” If answer is yes: “Then own up, say you are sorry and make it right. If the person is no longer with us, then just make sure you don’t make the same mistake in the future.” If answer is no, “I just feel badly,” say, “If you didn’t do anything wrong, then guilt is the wrong word. The reason people call it guilt is because we don’t have another word in English to describe the feeling. It probably feels like guilt in your gut, but what you might be feeling is really a combination of regret mixed in with wishful thinking. Since you didn’t do anything wrong, you can stop feeling guilty. That doesn’t mean you won’t stop wishing it were different.” 18 6 Substituted Judgment Keeps the Focus on the Patient/Client/Resident Foundation of Person-Centered Care: The decision maker is supposed to step into the patient’s life and speak with the patient’s voice—not his or her own voice “What would the person be telling us if he or she were able to speak right now?” “Did she ever imagine how sick she could get? If she could see what has happened and how things have changed, would she understand and forgive you for the choices you have to make?” 19 Tools and Resources The Cards You’ve Been Dealt – Need’s Assessment cards to help the patient and/or family review the patient’s abilities and needs www.thecardsyoubebeendealt.com Go Wish Cards www.gowish.org (English and Spanish) Questions to Ask When Making Medical Decisions and the Insider’s Guide to Filling Out Your Advance Directive www.TheCaregiversPath.com on resource page Consider the Conversation – documentary about making end-oflife decisions www.considertheconversation.org Virtual Dementia Kit by www.secondwind.org Well Spouse Association: www.wellspouse.org Kindness Reminders: Free weekly ideas to help you to show love and support to a loved one. (Especially helpful for those doing long distance caregiving.) Go to www.KindEthics.com and sign up in the box in the upper right hand corner. 20 Book Resources How to Say it to Seniors – Closing the communication gap with our elders by David Solie, MS, PA Caregiver Mind Maps: New Tools For Eldercare by David Solie, MS, PA My Stroke of Insight: A Brain Scientist's Personal Journey by Dr. Jill Bolte Taylor They’re My Parents Too by Francine Russo Emotional Intelligence by Christine Wilding The Lost Art of Listening – How learning to listen can improve relationships by Michael P. Nichols Ph.D Getting to Yes: Negotiating Agreement Without Giving In by Roger Fisher and William Ury Transitioning Your Aging Parent – A 5 step guide through crisis and change by Dale Carter The Caregiver’s Path to Compassionate Decision Making: Making Choices for Those Who Can’t by Viki Kind 21 7 11:30 AM – 12:25 PM ‘Parting Thoughts: Palliative Care and Hospice for the Dementia Patient’ Gregory L. Phelps, M.D., M.P.H. Medical Director University of Tennessee Hospice Knoxville, TN Understand the role of opioids in treating both pain and dyspnea in the hospice patient Understand how to dose long and short duration opioids and how to adjust the dosages Enumerate at least three steps in Goals of Care discussion and why these discussions are so important List at least three different ways a patient can experience nausea Understand the FAST Scoring system and its role in the timing and appropriateness of referral of a dementia patient to hospice Notes: 6/5/2013 Palliative and Hospice Care for the Dementia Patient. 27th Annual Alzheimer's’ Research Symposium June 20th, 2013 Greg Phelps MD Alzheimer’s is a Fatal Disease • 6th most common hospice diagnosis • 6th leading cause of death • Life expectancy between 2‐20 years with median survival 4.2 years men, 5.7 years women • Last three months of life 40.7 % underwent at least one burdensome intervention (Hospitalization, PEG tube, ER visit) • Patient’s most commonly die of infection from aspiration, UTI or infection from decubitus. • 1 6/5/2013 There is Never, Ever “Nothing Else We Can Do…Ever!” Cure Sometimes, Treat often, Comfort Always Hippocrates What is the purpose of Medicine? • Optimize health? • Cure Disease • Minimize disease burden • Maximize lifespan? • Control symptoms • Relieve pain • Improve/ optimize function? Two Things We Don’t Talk About!!‐ Death and Money! Actually We are About Living Life Fully! 2 6/5/2013 “It is the Closure Fairy!” To Be Comfortable in Discussing our Patient’s Mortality We Must be Cognizant of our Own • Love is Stronger Than Death: Peter Kreeft 1972 • • • • • Death as an Enemy Death as a Stranger Death as a Friend Death as Mother Death as a Lover • Mortality: Christopher Hitchens 2012 • Final Gifts Understanding the Special Awareness, Needs and Communication of the Dying. Maggie Callahan Patricia Kelly 1992 What Most Doctor’s Think of Hospice/Palliative Care • I knew that, in order for a patient of mine to be eligible, I had to write a note certifying that he or she had a life expectancy of less than six months. And I knew few patients who had chosen it, except maybe in their very last few days, because they had to sign a form indicating that they understood their disease was incurable and that they were giving up on medical care to stop it. The picture I had of hospice was of a morphine drip • Atul Gawande: Letting Go, What Should Medicine Do when It Can’t Save Your Life, The New Yorker. Aug 2, 2010 3 6/5/2013 Palliative Care Defined • Palliative care is specialized medical care for people with serious illnesses. This type of care is focused on providing patients with relief from the symptoms, pain, and stress of a serious illness—whatever the diagnosis. • The goal is to improve quality of life for both the patient and the family. Palliative care is provided by a team of doctors, nurses, and other specialists who work with a patient's other doctors to provide an extra layer of support. Palliative care is appropriate at any age and at any stage in a serious illness, and can be provided together with curative treatment. Everyone is entitled to SOME Palliative Care Eight Domains in Palliative Care –Physical –Psychological or psychiatric –Social –Spiritual –Cultural –Ethical –Care of the imminently dying –Process of care 4 6/5/2013 What is the Difference Between Hospice and Palliative Care Hospice is an insurance benefit‐ Palliative Care is a treatment philosophy Palliative Care: Can be engaged in life threatening illness much earlier in acute care when curative treatment still on‐going. Palliative Care Hospice Hospice‐A 1982 Medicare benefit . For last six months of life. Usually home or residential based. Used when curative care no longer pursued The Economist‐May 25th, 2013 • As people live longer…for all the hot air about “Death Panels”, the cost effectiveness of a health‐care system matters. • More than perhaps any government in the world, America’s pays doctors to do stuff rather than keep people well. • That has to change.” Follow the Money!! Democrats Propose (Best Case Scenario) • US Healthcare is over 18% of GDP (more the twice the next first world country) 2.8 Trillion Dollars this year!! Projected to grow to 21% by 2023 5% of Medicare beneficiaries die annually. 27.4% of ALL Medicare outlay is in final year of life The Obama’s budget proposal would require $57 billion in higher payments by Medicare beneficiaries, cut $306 billion in projected Medicare payments to health care providers and squeeze $19 billion out of Medicaid, the program for low‐income people. • 10,000 Baby Boomers hit 65 EVERY DAY • Percent of population over 65 to grow from 12% to 20% by 2030 • Single fastest growing segment of population is the “old elderly” ‐‐ 85+ • • • • • • New York Times April 10th, 2013 5 6/5/2013 Citing possible 8.3 million dollar savings, Gov. Bobby Jindal of Louisiana drops hospice for Medicaid Patients (Dec 2012) Headline: ‘Jindal to Poor: “Drop Dead”’ January‐ Jidal rescinds order Why? • It was pointed out that many of those people dying at home in hospice would soon be dying in much more expensive hospitals • Savings to Medicare by hospice and LOS to death: • 1‐7 days……… $2,651.00 • 8‐14 days……. $5040.00 • 15‐30 days. $6,430.00 Health Affairs, 3/6/2013 Hospitals Can be Dangerous to the Elderly (and others) “ Here‐‐‐Fill out this tag and attach it to your toe.” A Scenario • Ms B in nursing home with moderately advanced Alzeimer’s and CHF and DJD develops low grade cough and temp of 100.4. • Night nurse calls on call physician who is unfamiliar with patient. He tells nurse to send patient to hospital • Hospital ER sees small patch of possible atelectasis normal white count and chemistries. Has hospitalist admit patient for IV antibiotics • 2nd night there patient climbs over bed rails breaks hip hospital stay now prolonged for hip replacement and rehab before return to SNF • Outlander JG, Berenson RA: Reducing Unnecessary Hospitalizations in Nursing Home Residents. NEJM 365 (13) 1165‐67 6 6/5/2013 Geriatric Frailty “ A Physiologic syndrome characterized by decreased reserve and diminished resistance to stressors resulting from cumulative decline across multiple physiologic systems causing vulnerability to adverse outcomes “ American Geriatric Society Three of Five: Secondary Criteria: • Loss of Muscle strength • Unintended weight loss • Increased sleep or low activity level • Poor endurance easy fatigue • Unsteady gait or slowed performance • • • • Decreased cognition Decreased balance Deficient social support Poor motor processing Poor health (self reported) • Frailty in general associated with 300‐500 increased risk of mortality Mechanisms of Geriatric Frailty • Sarcopenia: after age 40 8‐12% muscle loss per decade most replaced with fat. After 75 process accelerates • Neuro‐endocrine dysfunction: low testosterone, estrogen, insulin growth factor, DHEA, cortisol, growth hormone. • Chronic Low Grade inflammation: adipose tissues secrete pro‐inflammatory cytokines like IL‐6 etc. Curative/Functional/Palliative Curative Functional Palliative Goal: Cure Disease Goal: Maintain/improve function Goal: Comfort care Object of Treatment is disease Object of treatment is disease while not impacting function of patient Object of treatment is Patient and Family Primary value is measurable data‐ labs X‐rays test (tends to devalue subjective immeasurable data) Primary value is assessment Primary Value is patient of function to determine experience of suffering and appropriate level of treatment symptoms Patient’s body differentiated from mind and often divided into treatable body parts by specialty Patient’s function as both body and mind must be protected Patient is viewed as complex being with emotional, physical social and spiritual components Therapy is indicated to cure disease or slow progression. Therapy is scaled to what patient can tolerate without likelihood of additional functional loss (Avoid “one point restraints) Therapy is indicated for relief of symptoms or suffering and congruent with patients Values and beliefs Death is the Ultimate Failure Helping patient hold off loss of function until the very end is a success. Enabling Patient to live fully and comfortably until he or she dies is a success 7 6/5/2013 Hospital Associated Disability JAMA Oct 26th, 2011 Covinsky KE, Pierluissi E., Johnston CB • Loss of ADLs during acute hospitalization. • Occurs in 1/3 hospitalized patients > 70 • > 50% of patients > 85 leave hospital with new disability • 1/3 of hospitalized elderly have delirium (more commonly hypoactive delirium) • 41% of elderly who developed HAD DIED! In under one year, another 29% still disabled at one year Steps to Avoid HAD • Avoid the “One Point Restraints” when possible: Urinary catheters, IVs, O2 catheters, NG tubes • Better recognition of functional status • Exercise/ walk patients if at all able. • Ensure patient is eating properly • Avoid sedative hypnotics and anti‐histamines • Recognize and palliate pain and symptoms CAPC Survey of Attitudes For Patients with Serious Illness 800 patient’s surveyed Released June 28th 2011 Available at CAPC.org • Biggest concerns: Cost, Control, Communication, Choice, Cure? Physicians not providing all treatment options‐ 55% Doctors not sharing information with each other‐55% Doctors not choosing best option for seriously ill‐ 54% Patient and family leave physician office not knowing what they are supposed to do when they get home‐51% – Patient lacks control over treatment options‐ 51% – Doctor doesn’t spend enough time talking and listening with patient and family 50% – – – – 8 6/5/2013 California Healthcare Foundation Survey 2012 70% ‐90% of patient’s say they would prefer to die at home (about 30% do) 66% say they would prefer to die a natural peaceful death. Only 7% desire all invasive therapeutic options deployed. Palliative Care When?:Triggers • The ‘‘surprise question’’: You would not be surprised if the patient died within 12 months or before adulthood • Frequent admissions: e.g., more than one admission for same condition within several months, or coming from SNF • Complex care requirements: e.g., functional dependency; complex home support for ventilator/antibiotics/feedings/home O2 • Decline in function, feeding intolerance, or unintended decline in weight (e.g., failure to thrive) • Move to, or from ICU • Initiation of dialysis or ventilation • PEG tube contemplated • Pain or symptom control • Goals of Care/advance directives/Code status So What Happens to the Elderly (Survey 4158 Seniors) Non‐Hospice Patients • Elderly patients avg. age 83 • 75% visit ER in final 6 months (40% more than once) • >50% visit ER final month • Of those in ER, 75% admitted • 39% admitted to ICU • 68% admitted died in hospital Hospice patients • Hospice Patients • Less than 10% seen in ER • Vast majority die at home • Smith AK, McCarthy E, Weber E et al; Half Of Older Americans Seen In Emergency Department In Last Month Of Life; Most Admitted To Hospital, And Many Die There. Health Affairs. June 2012 31:61277‐1285 • 9 6/5/2013 End of Life Discussions Subjects terminal cancer patient 4.4 month life expectancy • 123 of 332 (37%) patients with terminal illness had end of life discussions • “Have you and your doctor discussed any particular wishes you have about the care you would receive if you were dying?” • These patients elected less aggressive care with fewer ICU admits 4.1% vs 12.4%, fewer ventilation episodes 1.6 vs 11%, • More aggressive care was associated with poorer quality of life for the patient and higher risk of major depressive disorder for bereaved care givers. (PTSD) • Study showed that patients did not have increased depression or loss of hope. AA Wright, B Zhang A.Ray et al, Associations Between End of Life Discussions Patient Mental Health, Medical Care Near Death And Caregiver Bereavement Adjustment. JAMA 1665‐1673. Oct 8, 2008 Advance Care Planning Not So much about Death as It’s About How You Want to Live • • • • • • • What are your goals How do you want to live Paint me a picture of how you see your life What is important to you What do you want for your family How do you want to be remembered “Begin with the end in Mind.” Stephen Covey “Hope for the Best/Plan for the Worst “ The Goals of Care Discussion • Pre‐planning and semiotics • Introductions • Purpose • Tell me about the patient • What do you understand about the diagnosis?? • WARNING SHOT (I wish statements) • Explain diagnosis • Await reaction • Validate emotions • Keep the focus on the patient • Did you (r)… ever talk/advance directives • What would they want (substituted judgment) • CPR/AND/ DNAR • Summarize and record. Success of a GOC is based on how much family and patient talk! 10 6/5/2013 Mortality PPS Score Six Month Mortality % Survival in Days average • PPS Score 10‐20%....96% • PPS Scare 30‐40%....89% • PPS Score 40‐50%...80% • • • • • • Median 1 Median 2 PPS 10%.... 1.88 6 PPS 20% ….2.62 6 PPS 30% ….6.7 41 40% ………..10.3 41 50%........... 13.9 41 We Was Robbed! Hospice Diagnoses Removed as of 4/30/2013 • CMS demanding more precision in coding and diagnosis. (Actually a proposal for comment but most hospices freaked out!) • Debility • Adult Failure to Thrive • Senile dementia, pre‐senile dementia, vascular dementia • Must be Alzheimer’s, CVA with dementia, Creutzfeldt‐Jakob, etc. 11 6/5/2013 FAST Criteria For Dementia Functional Assessment Staging • FAST (Functional Assessment Staging) Scale Items: Stage #1: No difficulty, either subjectively or objectively Stage #2: Complains of forgetting location of objects; subjective work difficulties Stage #3: Decreased job functioning evident to coworkers; difficulty in traveling to new locations Stage #4: Decreased ability to perform complex tasks (e.g., planning dinner for guests; handling finances) Stage #5: Requires assistance in choosing proper clothing Dementia is hospice qualified @ 7A if associcated With aspiration, or Upper UTI, sepsis, weight loss Of 10% in six months‐Stage III‐IV decubiti etc. NHPCO Guidelines. • FAST (Functional Assessment Staging) Scale Items: Stage #6: Decreased ability to dress, bathe, and toilet independently: ∙ Sub‐stage 6a: Difficulty putting clothing on properly ∙ Sub‐stage 6b: Unable to bath properly; may develop fear of bathing ∙ Sub‐stage 6c: Inability to handle mechanics of toileting (i.e., forgets to flush, does not wipe properly) ∙ Sub‐stage 6d: Urinary incontinence ∙ Sub‐stage 6e: Fecal incontinence Stage #7: Loss of speech, locomotion, and consciousness: ∙ Sub‐stage 7a: Ability to speak limited (1 to 5 words a day) ∙ Sub‐stage 7b: All intelligible vocabulary lost ∙ Sub‐stage 7c: Non‐ambulatory ∙ Sub‐stage 7d: Unable to sit up independently ∙ Sub‐stage 7e: Unable to smile It is Every Doctor’s Responsibility to Effectively Relieve Pain! Symptoms‐Pain and More Total Suffering of end of life patients • • • • • • • • • . 40‐70 % suffer unnecessary pain Fatigue 70‐95% Shortness of Air: 21‐78% Delirium 28‐83% Constipation/Bowel Obstruction 5‐28% Nausea/ vomiting 15‐40% Dry mouth/mouth sores Depression Spiritual angst 12 6/5/2013 For seniors, It is a GOOD Day when nothing New hurts! Common Sources of Geriatric Pain • Musculoskeletal: arthritis, spine disorders • Nighttime leg pain, RLS, PVD muscle cramps • Cancer: 80% of cancer patients have pain and chemotherapy can cause neuropathic pain. • Neuropathic pain such as diabetic neuropathy or Shingles (PHN) Challenges to Treating Geriatric Pain Possible Cognitive Impairment Fear of Addiction Stoicism/ under‐reporting Increased risk of ADR (3% risk general population 10% risk geriatric population) • Challenges of poly‐pharmacy • • • • 13 6/5/2013 American Geriatric Society Chronic Pain Guidelines First promulgated 1999 Revised 2002 Most recent revision April 21, 2009 Two substantial changes: NSAIDS and Cox‐2 be used “rarely” and “with extreme caution” due to risky side effect profile that includes worsening hypertension, edema, heart failure renal failure and GI bleeds. • Also recommends “all patients with moderate to severe pain, pain related to functional impairment or diminished quality of life due to pain should be considered for opioid therapy • • • • • Opioid Analgesics and the Risk of Fractures in Older Adults with Arthritis. Matthew Miller MD, MPH, ScD, Til Stürmer MD, MPH, Deborah Azrael PhD, et al. J. of American Geriatrics Society. Vol. 59 (3) pp 430‐8 March 2011 • Compared falls risk in between 12,436 opioid initiators and 4,874 NSAID initiators. Opioid patients had increased risk of falls that lasted two weeks after initiation 120 fractures /1000 person years vs 25 fractures/1000 person years for NSAIDs Problems with the Study • 45% of patients were started on Darvocet which is sufficiently toxic (seizures cardio‐toxicity) to be taken off US markets • Opioids were given to opioid Naïve patients in doses up to 225 mg codeine (37 mg morphine equivalent) • Opioid initiators more likely to be on benzos, PPI, steroids and more likely to have already fallen in the last year. • Source: Geripal blog‐ April 12, 2011 14 6/5/2013 The Gold Standard and Conversions Oral Morphine Equivalents (OME) Morphine Hydromorphone Oral Med 30 mg 7.5 IV/Sub Q Med 10 mg 1.5 Hydrocodone </= oral morphine </= oxycodone Oral morphine daily dose is double fentanyl patch dose IE: 50 mcg/h patch equals 100 mg daily oral morphine. Oxymorphone is slightly more that twice the potency of morphine So 40 mg Opana = about 100 mg oral morphine Codeine is 1/6th as potent as morphine, i.e. 30 mg of Codeine = 5 mg of morphine Demerol 100 mg IV = 10 mg Morphine IV ALWAYS REDUCE DOSE IN CONVERSION 25‐50% FOR INCOMPLETE CROSS TOLERANCE Scientists have identified 9 different forms of mu opioid receptors All conversion tables are, at best, rough equivalencies Timing Pain Meds • Onset to peak : IV 10‐15 minutes, Sub Q 30 minutes, PO one hour‐short acting 3‐4 hours long acting. Fentanyl patches up to 12 hours. • Duration three to four hours for most short acting medications. (a little less for demerol, fentanyl) • So meds should be should be scheduled accordingly‐‐‐ regularly and routinely • If an IV med hasn’t worked in 15 minutes, it won’t. If a PO short acting med hasn’t worked in an hour, waiting four hours just ensures an effective dose is never reached. Pain Meds Three Prescriptions • 1. Long acting: MS Contin, Oxycontin, Fentanyl patches, Opana ER, Synalgous • 2. Short acting: MS IR, oxycodone, hydrocodone 3. Bowel regimen • The Opioid Naïve Patient: Set scheduled Q 4 h short acting. hydrocodone/oxycodone/morphine 5‐10 mg) PRN’s much more frequent‐q 1. • Tally all meds, scheduled and PRN and create new scheduled dose using long acting medication with breakthrough dose about 10‐15% of total daily long acting dose given q one hour PRN! 15 6/5/2013 Opioid Perils Number Needed to Treat,(NNT) 2.6 Number needed to Harm (NNH) 8 • Most opioids processed by kidneys • Testosterone/hypogonadism • Opioid Induced Neurotoxicity‐twitches or hyper‐ algesia. • Respiratory depression/COPD very rare • Addiction‐ rare!! (but watch the family) • GI‐ Constipation as long as opioids prescribed • Nausea usually transient several days • Sweating • Sedation transient 2‐3 days Delirium: Acute change in level of arousal, altered sleep/wake, disturbance of memory and attention, perceptual disturbances with delusions and hallucinations: Fast Facts 001. • • • • • • Hyperactive (13‐46%)‐restless, agitated, confused, hallucinations, “climbing over the bedrails” 52‐88% of terminally ill patients develop delirium Hypoactive (up to 86%) reduced awareness, psycho motor retardation, lethargy. (Higher mortality than hyperactive) 42% of advanced cancer patients have delirium on admission and 88% at the end of life‐ Terminal Delirium In cancer patients who develop delirium, 30 day mortality 83% 74% of patients can recall “being confused” in episode of delirium and over 80% said it was distressing DELIRIUMS • • • • • • • • • D Drugs: opioids, anticholinergics E Eyes (sensory deficit‐sundowning) L Low O2 I, CVA, PE, I Infection UTI, Pneumonia R Retention urine/stool I Ictal (seizures) U Under nourished, under hydrated Metabolic DM, calcium, Sodium, S Subdural 16 6/5/2013 Treatment Non‐Pharmacologic First • • • • • • • • • Minimize catheters, IV’s restraints Avoid immobility Monitor nutrition/hydration Monitor stool and urine output Control pain Review medications Minimize noise and interventions/promote sleep Orientation Board and familiar family Reorient/redirect communication with patient Treatment • Haldol, haldol haldol……..Haldol • Few anti‐cholinergic effects, minimal cardiovascular effects, lack of active metabolites, versatility of routes of administration. (liquid 2mg/ml, tabs 1, 2 and 5 mg, injectable solutions 5mg/ml • Maximum doses between 20‐100 mg orally • Parenteral dose about ½ PO dose • Usual starting dose 0.5‐1 mg Q 6. • May be given hourly until effective What Else • Chlorpromazine (Thorazine) 12.5‐50 mg PO, PR, IM, IV (no sub Q) more sedating, helpful for terminal agitation. Can be given hourly and then Q 6 • Can cause severe hypotension • “Atypical” antipsychotics not shown to be significantly more effective than Haldol but may have less side effects if Haldol dose >4 mg/day. Also have longer half life so less frequent dosing. • Ativan (lorazepam) helps with anxiety but may paradoxically worsen agitation. • Pentobarbital 100‐200 mg po IM or rectal 17 6/5/2013 Feeding Tubes and the Dementia “Death Spiral • Scenario: Repeat admission for severely demented nursing home patient with pneumonia. • Patient resists feeding, chokes a little, nurses suggest swallowing study to hospitalist. • Swallowing study demonstrates aspiration • GI is consulted for feeding/Peg tube to “improve nutrition, and reduce aspiration.” • tube placed patient returns to nursing home. • Pulls tube out, restrained replaced gets pneumonia • AND REPEAT!, Repeat, Repeat • Family conference • Death Fast Facts‐ 084 Feeding Tubes and the Dementia • 51% of severe AD patients will try to refuse food. • Inability to maintain nutrition orally in the face of a chronic life limiting illness is usually a marker of the dying process. • Risk factors INDEPENDENT of patient for getting a feeding tube include: speech therapist on full time staff, larger facility, more Medicaid, fewer assistants • Nursing Homes receive higher reimbur$ement for tube fed patients. • JAMA Evidence‐Care at the Close of Life. McPhee, Winkler Rabow et al editors, Chapter 12 2011 Feeding Tubes DO NOT • • • • • • Prevent aspiration, Improve function or quality of life, Increase comfort Improve weight gain Improve wound healing Substantially increase life expectancy 18 6/5/2013 Changes in Hospice Medicare Patients:2000‐2009 • Number of patients dying at home increased from 24.6% to 32.6% • Number of terminally ill patients using hospice increased from 21.6% to 42.3 % • However!!! 1/3 of patients dying in hospice had been in ICU in previous 30 days • Percent of patients dying in under 3 days increased to 28.4% Plan AHEAd • Survey of over 500 elderly patients and families (average patient age 80) • 76% had thought about EOL and only 12% wanted aggressive treatment. • 49% had done advanced care plan • 76% formally named surrogate decision maker • Only 30% had discussed this w PCP and 55% with ANY member of health care team • Agreement between documentation in the record and patient’s expressed wishes only agreed 30% of the time! Heyland DK, Barwich D, Picora D; Failure to Engage in Hospitalized Elderly Patients and their Families in Advance Care Planning. JAMA Internal Medicine 4/1/2013 Tennessee Health Care Decisions Act 2004 TN Code Annotated 68‐11‐1801‐1815 • Streamlines and simplifies healthcare surrogacy, Allows universal DNR Allows physician to choose surrogate if no written request. • Places fine of $2,500 for failure to abide by patients written wishes (or hides or defaces living will) . • Forms available: www.endoflifecaretn.org • Do not need notary or lawyer. • Must be done early in Alzheimer’s if patient is to have capacity. • 19 6/5/2013 Facts of TN HCDA • Only effective IF patient loses decisional capacity • If patient divorced, named spouse loses place. • Takes court order to set aside written AD if patient non‐decisional • Surrogate may be chosen by physician. Should be someone involved with patient with regular contact and available to engage in face to face contact with physician. Document choice. • Consideration given (in order) spouse, adult child, parent, adult sibling, other adult relative. • Section 68‐11‐1706 1‐4 What Does Hospice Bring • Home hospice is 100% covered by Medicare/ Tenncare and most insurances. Paid on daily per capita basis. • Regulations require that hospice be delivered by hospice team that includes physician, nurses, nurses aids, chaplains, social workers, therapists dietician and volunteers • Covers 100% of medications (from formulary) related to comfort care of the terminal illness • Also covers DME such at hospital bed, O2, wheelchair etc. 20 1:25 PM – 2:25 PM ‘Legal Issues Affecting Persons with Dementia’ Kelly G. Frere, C.E.L.A. Guyton & Frere, Attorneys Lenoir City, TN • Recognize the legal rights of persons with dementia • Define ‘incapacity’ and identify who is responsible for making the determination • Understand options for when legal documents do not work • Understand options for when there is no responsible party available Notes: GmoN&FRERE ATTORNEYS.' Matthew B. Frere. LL.M. Kelly Guyton Frere Arline Winchester Guyton (Retired) ELDER LAW SERVICES: Long Term Care Planning Special Needs Planning Medicaid Counseling Conservatorship Services June 4. 2013 I, Kelly G. Frere, do not have a financial interest/ arrangement or affiliation with one or more organizations that could be perceived as a real or apparent conflict of interest in the conteAi of the subject of this presentation. h~ b. C1v-~ KellyG. Frere Eldtr La'lJ.'AuornrYl &1 CQUnul/orl • Catifitd by tht TN Commission on Continuing Lrgal Education and Spuialization 1001 E. Broadway' Lenoir Cit)'. TN 37771 Telephone: 865.694.0373 • Fax: 865.531.9714' E-mail: [email protected] 27th Annual Alzheimer’s Disease Research Symposium June 20, 2013 Legal Issues Affecting Persons with Dementia Kelly Guyton Frère Certified Elder Law Attorney www.gfelderlaw.com 865.694.0373 1. 2. You run an assisted living facility. One of your residents - Mary - tells you that her son is coming from Kentucky to take her home with him and that she wants to go. You call Mary’s daughter, Kathy (who is Mary’s agent under a Power of Attorney), and Kathy gets a statement from Mary’s doctor that Mary is “incompetent” and can’t make this decision for herself. Is the doctor’s letter sufficient for you to take instructions from Kathy and not let Mary leave the facility? a. Yes. A physician licensed in Tennessee has the legal authority to declare a person incompetent and remove their decision-making ability from them. b. No. The physician’s statement is only evidence that there’s a problem. Mary can do whatever she wants - even if she has been diagnosed with dementia. Bill is a vibrant 70 years old, a widower who lives alone, and has recently been diagnosed with cancer. His oncologist states that with treatment Bill has a great chance of beating the cancer. Bill refuses treatment. Bill’s two daughters are upset that he won’t accept treatment, are convinced that he is just depressed and suffering from some sort of dementia, and want to force him to accept treatment. They are confident that once cured he will be glad he consented to treatment. Is there a legal method through which the daughters can force him into treatment? a. Yes. If they can show through medical evidence that treatment has an excellent probability of either curing him or significantly extending his life expectancy the daughters can obtain a temporary conservatorship over him to force treatment. b. No. Bill can make his own decisions about what medical treatment he does or does not want even if treatment options are positive and his decision will most likely result in death. Page -1- 3. 4. 5. Two years ago Sam had a massive stroke and was rendered totally incapacitated. His son, Jerry, went to court and obtained a conservatorship over Sam in order to manage Sam’s finances and make medical decisions. Now, two years later, Sam has recovered enough to communicate and make decisions and to move around with assistance. Sam wants to terminate the conservatorship so that from now on his girlfriend can help him. Can Sam do this? a. No. Once a conservatorship has been established and a person’s rights removed the conservatorship cannot be terminated because of the presumption that they don’t have the mental capacity to terminate. b. No. The conservatorship cannot be terminated but Sam could convince the court to replace his son with his girlfriend to be his conservator. c. Yes. The ward of a conservatorship (Sam) can petition the court to terminate the conservatorship but he has to prove with medical evidence that he no longer needs one. April fell, broke her hip, and is now in the hospital. April named her sister, June, as her health care agent but is now on the “outs” with June. April’s doctor, who diagnosed April with dementia 4 years ago, doesn’t think that April understands the decisions she is making and calls June. April gets mad and tells the doctor that he is not to listen to June any more. Which is the best decision for the doctor to make: a. The doctor documents April’s chart as to her mental incapacity and only takes instructions from June. b. The doctor can tell that April doesn’t like June so he picks someone else in the family to make April’s health care decisions. c. The doctor tells the hospital’s legal counsel that no one can make decisions and that the hospital should go to court and get a conservator. d. The doctor only listens to the instructions April gives him. Betty has dementia to the point where she can no longer manage her finances or even make decisions. Her son, Mark, has started acting pursuant to the POA Betty signed a few years ago. Betty has been paying the college tuition for each of her grandchildren. When Mark takes over only Mark’s daughter, Elizabeth, is still in college. Is it okay for Mark to use his mother’s money to continue to pay his daughter’s tuition. Page -2- 6. 7. a. No. An agent cannot make gifts to his own children out of the principal’s money. b. No. An agent cannot make gifts to anyone once he takes over as POA. c. Yes. An agent can use the principal’s money for any purpose for which the agent knows the principal would have used the money and his mother has a history of making these payments. d. Yes. An agent can make gifts if the POA document specifically states that he can. Arnold is 85, hard of hearing and has night blindness. His doctor was so concerned about him driving that the doctor contacted the State of Tennessee a year ago and went through the process of having Arnold’s license revoked. Arnold continued to drive so his son took his car away. That made Arnold mad so he has threatened to walk to a used car dealer a mile away and buy another car. His son went to the dealer, showed them the notice revoking his father’s license, and a letter from the doctor that Arnold is not “safe to drive,” and told them not to sell his father a car. Can the dealer sell Arnold a car? a. No. Arnold’s license was revoked and he cannot purchase a car. b. No. The combination of the revocation and the doctor’s statement and the demand of the agent under the POA are enough to stop the dealer. c. Yes. The dealer can sell Arnold as many cars as the dealer wants. Arlene has a validly executed Power of Attorney for health care decisions and a statutory Living Will - both of which comply with state law and state that she does not want artificial methods of support to prolong her life. She has a serious accident and in the emergency room her son, Ronald, is told that her neck is broken and that she will die unless she is hooked up to a ventilator. The doctor in the emergency room is holding a copy of Arlene’s Living Will. Ronald is scared, feels rushed and tells them to hook her up. After two weeks the ventilator is disconnected and Arlene breathes on her own but is now in a persistent vegetative state where she will remain for a long time at great expense. Ronald wants to sue the hospital because the hospital did not honor his mother’s Living Will. What are his chances in this lawsuit? a. Good. Arlene has a valid Living Will of which the hospital was aware and her wishes should have prevailed. b. Not good. As her health care advocate Ronald had the final say and he chose life. Page -3- 8. 9. 10. Bernice is 80 years old and has been diagnosed with dementia. Her friends and neighbors help when they can, but none of them have been appointed legal agents for her. Before long people start to notice that Bernice’s son, a long time drug addict, is coming and going from the house. Her friends notice that Bernice’s medicine is disappearing as is the cash that she keeps on hand for her housekeeper and yard man. When a friend took Bernice to the bank to get $300 more in cash that was gone, too, after the son visited the next day. Is there anything the friends can do? a. No. Bernice has been diagnosed with dementia but has not been deemed by a court to need a conservator. b. Yes. Anyone can file a court petition to ask that a conservator be appointed, but whoever files that petition would have to overcome the son’s priority ranking in the law to be appointed. c. Yes. The friends can file for an Order of Protection on behalf of Bernice to keep the son away. Harry recently signed a Financial Power of Attorney naming both his son and his daughter as his agents. He went to an attorney experienced in writing these documents, and is confident that he has up-to-date documents written specifically to cover his personal financial matters and which are completely compliant with laws in the State of Tennessee. Harry is surprised when his son calls him and tells him that his Power of Attorney is “no good” because the son tried to use it - first at his father’s bank, and then with the Social Security Administration - and it was declined. Are you surprised? a. Yes. Harry has a good document, with valid signature and witnessing language, and whoever it’s submitted to is supposed to honor it. After all, the agent is standing in the place of the principal. b. No. Harry did the best planning he could, but no one has to honor a power of attorney document. Sam had a severe stroke, is not conscious and cannot make his own health care decisions. He does not have an advance directive for health care decisions (e.g., a health care power of attorney or advance care plan). His wife wants to stop extraordinary measures and take him home; his daughter wants the hospital to remain aggressive. Who does the hospital have to listen to? Page -4- 11. a. The wife, because a spouse is by law the priority decision-maker. b. The daughter because the hospital must choose the “retention of life” when there is a dispute as to continuing care. c. Neither. d. Either one the doctor chooses. You know that your mother has dementia. You don’t understand everything the doctor has told you, but you know she is being treated and you are comfortable with what’s being done. You know that there are legal reasons for knowing the “degree” of your mother’s dementia, but a friend tells you there are legal reasons why you should know what “kind” of dementia she has. Why? a. Because legal documents are honored or refused not only for the degree of capacity a person had at the time they signed their legal documents but also for the kind of dementia they had at the time. b. Because certain government benefits are paid based on the kind of dementia a person has. c. Because your mother can start collecting payments on her long term care insurance only if she is diagnosed with certain kinds of dementia. Page -5- 2:25 PM – 3:25 PM ‘The Best Friends Approach to Alzheimer’s Activities’ David Troxel, M.P.H. Writer/Long‐term Care Consultant Sacramento, CA Describe the difference between structured and unstructured activities Name three ways to encourage persons with dementia to participate in activity programming Name three components of an outstanding, contemporary dementia activity program Describe how to get caregiving staff involved in activities Notes: The Best Friends Approach to Dementia Care David Troxel, MPH Disclosure Statement of Financial Interest • I, David Troxel, DO NOT have a financial interest/arrangement or affiliation with one or more organizations that could be perceived as a real or apparent conflict of interest in the context of the subject of this presentation. Dr. Alzheimer 1 Auguste Deter • November 25, 1901, 51 years old • Problems with every day tasks • Jealousy, delusions • Memory • “I have lost myself” AD or Dementia? • Dementia is the umbrella term for anything that causes confusion, memory loss, personality changes and cognitive decline. • Alzheimer’s is a type of dementia (others are mini-strokes, frontal lobe, etc.) An example 2 The growing power of scans Be a Best Friend • What the person with dementia needs is a Best Friend, someone who has empathy and understanding and is supportive Being Person Centered 3 Daphne Gormley, Santa Barbara • Dx at 59. Credits dementia meds with helping. • Uses water soluble crayons and felt tipped markers for my paintings. “Rather than limiting my artwork, my Alzheimer’s seems to have unleashed a whole new area of creativity for me.” • Emphasizes process rather than outcome. • Ambitious, motivated. • Daphne continues. . . • “One of the benefits of my art for me is that it provides me a way of communicating without words. The colors I use are colors I find to be joyous. This is a way for me express my joy in painting and in my life. AD has really taught me to concentrate on the things I can do not on the things I can no longer do.” 4 Develop “the Knack” • Knack is the “art of doing difficult things with ease.” • Or, “clever tricks and strategies!” • Helps in unstructured moments. 5 Knack • Humor • Flexibility • Patience • Respect • Being in the moment • Creative activities Let’s practice • That President Eisenhower is doing a great job. • I want to go home! • Turning No into Yes • You’re late! Being a Best Friend 6 We Know how to Create a Quality Dementia Care Program Purposeful chores Creative activities Conversation Learning & growth Using the Life Story Laughter Exercise Music Animals Being outside Tips • Bullet Cards • Resident Jeopardy • 1-100 Campaigns • Putting Life Story to work in activity creation. • Monthly focus • Shadow box beauty shows • Name tags 7 The Knack & Challenging Behaviors • Walk a mile in their shoes – empathy • Look for triggers/causes • Double or redouble your Life Story efforts • Offer a consistent approach/language The Knack & Challenging Behaviors • Look for medical causes/sudden changes • Have a “5 New Idea Meeting” The Knack & Communication • • • • • Persons retain a desire to communicate Ask opinions Give compliments Provide cues and cues Tie in to the life story 8 Do you like my tie? 9 The Impact of Best Friends www.bestfriendsapproach.com www.facebook.com/bestfriendsapproach 10 NOTES: 3:45 PM – 4:45 PM ‘Building a Culture of Care in Alzheimer’s Programs’ David Troxel, M.P.H. Writer/Long‐term Care Consultant Sacramento, CA Name three elements of culture change in long term care Describe three ways to effectively train and support staff Describe how a positive culture can reduce behavior challenges Describe how a positive work culture can support business success Notes: 6/11/2013 • Best Building a Culture of Care in Alzheimer’s Programs David Troxel, MPH 1 Disclosure Statement of Financial Interest • I, David Troxel, DO NOT have a financial interest/arrangement or affiliation with one or more organizations that could be perceived as a real or apparent conflict of interest in the context of the subject of this presentation. Changing the Outcome Loss Isolation & Loneliness Sadness Confusion Worry/Anxiety Frustration Fear Paranoia Anger Embarrassment Fulfillment Connection Cheerfulness Orientation Contentment Peacefulness Security Trust Calm Confidence 1 6/11/2013 The Person with Alzheimer’s Disease Auguste Deter • Best Harry Nelson The Physical Environment Hall of shame! 2 6/11/2013 Hall of shame! Hall of shame! Elevator key pad in a skilled nursing building Hall of shame! 3 6/11/2013 “Life Stations?” Can be of interest if staff engages with residents/clients Can also be a marketing gimmick Baths often underused Best practices don’t need to be expensive 4 6/11/2013 Raised flowerbeds Inviting and welcoming bulletin boards Outdoor space 5 6/11/2013 Nostalgic pictures – Start a conversation: “What do you like best about your home town, San Francisco?” – Enjoy an old saying: “The coldest summer I ever spent was a winter in San Francisco” (Mark Twain) – Reminisce about cable cars Take‐Home Points Create an environment where there’s no place the person can’t go How can we make places more interesting? Dining room vs. “The Seattle Club” Hair salon vs. “Sophie’s Hideaway” Activity room vs. “Wednesday Club” • Best Our Staff 6 6/11/2013 What do we want in our staff? Person centered Ethical Flexible Willing to learn and grow Know the Life Story Positive Teamwork Skilled Engaging Dependable Knack Humor Flexibility Patience Respect Being in the moment Creative activities Where do we start? 7 6/11/2013 For ideas and inspiration What work can represent for staff Safe harbor Place for community Place for success Place where someone cares for me How we begin to change From a job and workplace to a caring community 8 6/11/2013 Tips for Hiring Best Friends Staff • Hire for the heart. . . . Train for the task. • Kay Kallander, ABHOW Innovative Training (elements handout) Includes everyone Teaches the right content—skills over information Not too much in any one class Involves games and role playing Innovative Training Takes place in an environment that facilitates learning Involves follow through and modeling Teaches life skills Is culturally appropriate 9 6/11/2013 Innovative Training Involves the person and family members Provides incentives for learning and growing Is evaluated by students on a regular basis Recognition How do we best do this? A Fundamental Principle We cannot treat staff badly and then expect badly treated staff to treat residents well. 10 6/11/2013 Can we create buy‐in? • Create a team poster for all to sign • Revise job descriptions and have team “re‐up” for the memory care job • Contests and campaigns are fun and successful (but don’t overdo) • Best The Business Case for Best Friends™ and Quality Programs The marketplace …..Will reward you when you do a great job! 11 6/11/2013 Distinctive programming • Pays off and doesn’t necessarily cost any more money. “Make your memory care memorable.” ―David Troxel 34 Families • Are more and more interested in training • Are well informed and increasingly sophisticated about dementia care • Want to use their financial resources well • They know a good program from a not‐so‐good program Staff • Do better when skilled • Families notice when staff have enthusiasm, • Have more buy‐in when interest, and skill! relationships form • We need to take best • Good programs almost practices from other always mean less industries and enhance turnover our staff training programs! 12 6/11/2013 The person with dementia • Responds to a joyful, positive environment • May not want to elope when there are things to see and do! • Has fewer behavior issues when happy • Will cooperate with personal care when approached well • Benefits from the feelings of friendship and connection You can see the difference! • www.bestfriendsapproach.com • www.facebook.com/bestfriendsapproach 13 NOTES: The 27th Annual Alzheimer’s Disease Symposium June 21, 2013 (Day Two) “Focus on the Science” 8:10 AM ‐ 9:10 AM ‘The Amnestic Dutchman’ Daniel D. Christensen, M.D. Clinical Professor of Psychiatry Clinical Professor of Neurology Adjunct Professor of Pharmacology University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah Recognize early signs and symptoms of Alzheimer’s Disease Appreciate the course of Alzheimer’s Disease from diagnosis to autopsy Notes: 6/3/2013 The Amnestic Dutchman Daniel D. Christensen, M.D. Clinical Professor of Psychiatry Clinical Professor of Neurology Adjunct Professor of Pharmacology University of Utah Objectives 1. To understand the common AD symptoms which lead to medical attention and diagnosis 2. To recognize how an accurate AD diagnosis is made. 3. To follow the disease course of an AD patient from diagnosis to autopsy 4. To understand how AD is diagnosed at autopsy Normal changes with ageing Brain loses cells (beginning in one’s 20’s) Ageing changes usually first noticed in late 40’s Memory isn’t as fast Takes longer to learn Harder to “multi‐task” Names, words, places sometimes can’t be recalled “on the spot” but later come to mind Can compensate using lists, routines, associations Changes do not impair one’s ability to function Changes don’t get progressively worse over time Remote memory remains intact 1 6/3/2013 When to be concerned Usually no concern Should be concerned Repeats something once Repeats > 2 times Doesn’t remember details Doesn’t remember the event Can’t function as fast Can’t plan and organize Can’t recall a name or fact, but it comes to mind later Can’t recall how to do something one has done many times before Doesn’t interfere with daily functioning Interferes with daily functioning The Diagnostic Process History Physical Exam Laboratory Data Cognitive / Functional Assessments The Diagnostic Process History ‐ 85 yo gentleman with a 2yr history of gradual memory impairment ‐ Good physical health ‐ No alcohol or tobacco use ‐ Current medications: multi‐vitamin fenoprofen 600 mg qid prn 2 6/3/2013 Family History and the risk of late‐onset Alzheimer’s Meta‐analysis of 10 studies (1982 ‐ 1990) Relative Risk of AD in those with one first degree relative with AD = 3.5 (95% Cl 2.6 – 4.6) R R in those with two or more first degree relatives with AD = 7.5 VanDuijn et al, Int J of Epidemiology, 1991, 20 The Diagnostic Process Physical Exam ‐ Complaint, occasional joint pain ‐ No abnormalities on exam ‐ Good vision and hearing ‐ Height 5’ 7” ‐ Weight 151 lbs ‐ Blood Pressure 130 / 70 The Diagnostic Process History Physical Exam Laboratory Data Cognitive / Functional Assessments 3 6/3/2013 The Diagnostic Process Laboratory Data The diagnostic workup for Alzheimer’s Disease should always include a structural scan (CT or MRI). Potentially reversible causes of Dementia • • • • • • • • D E M E N T I A Drugs Endocrinopathies Metabolic disorders Emotional depression Nutritional deficiencies Tumor / trauma Infirmities of the senses Arteriosclerosis Potentially reversible dementias Causes and outcomes Improvement (%) Partial Complete Total Drugs (including alcohol) Depression Hypothyroidism B12 deficiency Other metabolic causes Nl pressure hydrocephalus Subdural hematoma Cerebral tumor Other 16 6 ‐ 4 8 5 4 68 12 28 17 9 1 7 1 1 4 8 3 11 1 6 ‐ 4 9 1 32 100 26 10 Ann Intern Med 1988: 109, 476‐486 4 6/3/2013 The Diagnostic Process History Physical Exam Laboratory Data Cognitive / Functional Assessments Alzheimer’s Disease DSM IV Diagnostic Criteria Memory impairment One or more: aphasia, agnosia, apraxia, impaired executive function ADL’s Impaired functioning Insidious onset, Gradual progression Other potential causes Ruled out 5 6/3/2013 Cognitive Decline “Normal Aging” “Normal” MCI Mild Cognitive Impairment Dementia Petersen, Alzheimer’s & Dementia, 2005 New Diagnostic Approach 2011 Proposal Expands AD to three “phases” Asymptomatic / preclinical Symptomatic / pre‐dementia Dementia Requires reliable surrogate biomarkers (which we don’t yet have) 6 6/3/2013 Potential AD Biomarkers under investigation A. Structural evidence: Medial temporal atrophy B. Biochemical evidence: Alteration in A &/or Tau C. Neuroimaging evidence: FDG PET, amyloid imaging D. Genetic evidence: Autosomal dominant mutation Dementia D/Dx Features that favor the Dx of: Alzheimer’s Disease Age 65 or older Insidious onset Gradual progression Prominent memory difficulty No focal signs / sx No gait abnormalities Dementia D/Dx Features that favor the Dx of: Lewy Body Dementia Visual hallucinations Extrapyramidal symptoms (shuffling gait, masked facies, rigidity, gait instability) Waxing / waning alertness Neuroleptic supersensitivity 7 6/3/2013 Dementia D/Dx Features that favor the Dx of: Frontotemporal Dementia Behavioral disinhibition Apathy / Social withdrawal “Personality change” Socially inappropriate behavior Euphoria / irritability Nonfluent aphasia Dementia D/Dx Features that favor the Dx of: Vascular Dementia Abrupt onset Focal neurological signs & symptoms Stepwise deterioration Atherosclerosis / TIA’s History of strokes History of hypertension Risk and protective factors Risk • Age • Family history • Mutations (1, 14, 21) • Apo 4 • Down’s syndrome • Head trauma • MCI • Hypercholesterolemia • Hypertension • Diabetes Protective (?) • Education • Some NSAIDs • Anti‐oxidants • Statins • Apo 2 • Low fat diet • Aerobic exercise • Mental activity • Estrogen • Vit B12 / Folate 8 6/3/2013 Reducing the risk of Dementia Maintain healthy blood pressure Stay physically fit / exercise Stay mentally active / Reduce stress Avoid head injury (seat belts / helmets) Maintain a healthy diet Low‐fat / low cholesterol Low to Moderate wine intake Pharmacologic prophylaxis (?) Vitamin B12, Folate Statins Some NSAIDs Symptomatic Treatment Treatment that may benefit some symptoms, but the basic disease process is unchanged so the patient eventually returns to a course of progressive degeneration. Symptomatic Therapy in AD A. Improved over baseline Global Function B. Delayed decline C. Improved over expected Untreated Course Rx Treated Course t 27 9 6/3/2013 Acetylcholinesterase Inhibitors & NMDAReceptor Antagonist Efficacy: Cognition Namenda® (SIB) 2 0 -2 -4 -6 -8 -10 -12 0 4 12 Weeks 28 End Point Reisberg et al, NEJM 2003;348:1333-41 Long Term effects: ADL and Cognition AD2000 Study (donepezil) MMSE Change From Baseline Time (weeks) 2 0 12 24 36 48 60 72 84 96 108 120 Better 0 -2 -4 -6 Worse -8 Remaining subjects Donepezil Placebo 282 262 220 182 162 157 283 269 230 185 162 160 81 74 Donepezil Placebo AD2000 Collaborative Group. Lancet. 2004;363 (9427):2105-2115 Disease Modifying Treatment Treatment that changes the basic pathology of the disease so that the actual disease process is slowed or stopped. 10 6/3/2013 Disease Modifying Treatment in AD (Theoretical) Improvement Global function Stabilization More benign course Expected decline t Rx ? Future Alzheimer’s Disease Management ? Risk Factors Age Family history Head injury CV factors Tests Amyloid imaging Eye laser scan Skin enzyme levels Gene expression chip ApoE status Risk HIGH MOD Treatment Control risk factors Diabetes Lose weight Exercise Diet Medications Disease‐modifying LOW medication Potential AD drugs which have failed clinical trials Neramexane Phenserine Colostrinin Xaliproden Luprolide PBT‐2 LY450139 Clioquinol AN-1792 Rosiglitazone Alzhemed Flurizan Dimebon Neotrophin 11 6/3/2013 Alzheimer’s Disease Diagnosis Clinical Diagnosis DSMIV Diagnostic Criteria Based on symptoms and laboratory findings Pathological Diagnosis CERAD Neuropathological Criteria Based on autopsy findings (How many neuritic plaques are present and where are they located ?) Braak Stages (tangles) Stage 1 – Very Mild Staged as Mild, Moderate or Severe (Commonly by MMSE) Stage 6 – Very Severe At baseline, Marinus met DSM IV diagnostic criteria for Alzheimer’sDisease. What is the probability that he will meet pathologic diagnostic criteria for AD at autopsy? A. 10% B. 50% C. 85% D. 98% Predictive value of clinical diagnostic criteria for Alzheimer’s About 85% of those who meet diagnostic criteria during life will meet neuropathologic criteria for Alzheimer’s Disease at autopsy. (Range 75 ‐ 97%) J Am Geriatric Society 1999; 47: 564 ‐ 569 Alz Disease and Assoc Disorders 1996; 10: 180 ‐ 188 Neurology 1995; 45: 461 ‐ 466 Neurology 2000; 55: 1854 ‐ 1862 12 6/3/2013 Dementia Etiology 56% Alzheimer’s 15% Vascular 12% Mixed 8% Parkinson’s 4% Brain injury 5% Other ? 15 - 25% Lewy Body ? ? 15 - 25% Frontotemporal ? Neuropath findings in 233 dementia cases Other 3% PSP 2% DLB 6% DLB+V 7% AD + DLB 22% HS 9% AD 14% Vas 10% AD+V 12% AD+DLB+V 13% U of Washington, 2006 13 6/3/2013 RAV1 Basic ADL’s Eating Grooming Dressing Bathing Toileting Walking 14 9:10 AM – 10:10 AM ‘Vital Brain Aging: An Approach to Cognitive Health Care’ William R. Shankle, M.S., M.D., F.A.C.P. Director of Memory and Cognitive Disorders Program Hoag Neurosciences Institute Medical Director, Shankle Clinic Newport Beach, CA Recognize risk factors for ADRD and the importance of managing these risk factors Recognize underlying medical conditions associated with memory loss and other types of cognitive impairment. Understand importance of early detection of memory loss Understand different types of treatment options for different types of ADRD Notes: NOTES: 10:20 AM – 11:10 AM ‘Differential Diagnosis in Dementia’ John H. Dougherty, Jr., M.D. Medical Director, Cole Neuroscience Center University of Tennessee Medical Center‐Knoxville Knoxville, TN Understand the differential diagnosis of the primary degenerative dementias Have a working knowledge of the secondary causes of dementia Notes: 6/3/2013 Differential Diagnosis of Dementia John H. Dougherty, Jr. M.D. Medical Director Cole Neuroscience Center Dementia Cognitive Domains Insidious onset, slowly progressive • Impaired social or professional skills • Abnormalities of two cognitive domains Memory Verbal Fluency Executive Function Visual Spatial – Anosognosia – Normal Gait Attention Orientation If the above criteria are adhered to one can be 85-90 % confident that the clinical diagnosis of AD is correct. A Dementia can be either: Primary - or Secondary 1 6/3/2013 Differential Diagnosis of Dementia Primary Dementias: Frontal lobe dementia Parkinson’s disease Progressive supranuclear palsy,others: Vascular Dementias: 1. Multi-infarct dementia 2. SID,SVCVD (Binswanger’s disease) Diffuse Lewy Body Disease* Vascular dementias and AD AD 5% 10% AD and Lewy body dementias 65% 5% 7% 8% Small GW, et al. JAMA. 1997;278:1363-1371. American Psychiatric Association. Am J Psychiatry. 1997;154(suppl):1-39. Morris JC. Clin Geriatr Med. 1994;10:257-276. Features of Primary Degenerative Dementias Alzheimer’s Disease • Makes up ~60% of dementia cases • Usually involves memory Diffuse Lewy Body • Form visual hallucinations • Example (purple rabbit) Frontotemporal Dementia • Loss of Judgment • Social misconduct • Lack of social awareness Parkinson’s Dementia Vascular Dementia • Executive function and visual abilities impaired before memory • Documented cerbrovascular disease • Sudden onset Vascular Risk Factors • • • • • Hypertension Hyperlipidemia Diabetes Obesity Smoking history • • • • • TIA Hx: Strokes Cardiac Disease PVD Atrial fib or arrhythmias 2 6/3/2013 Copyright 2005, Journal Sentinel Inc. All rights reserved. Reprinted by permission Risk Factors Alcohol Abuse Physical Exercise Age Factors We Can’t Change Down’s Syndrome Blood Pressure Factors We Can Change Smoking Cholesterol Family History Depression Diabetes 3 6/3/2013 Secondary Dementias • Infection: CJD,HIV,Crypto. • Metabolic: Hypothyroid. • Deficiency States: B12 def. • Toxins: Abuse of Alcohol, Drugs, Heavy Metals. • Cancer: Brain Tumors • Trauma: SDH • Others: NPH, Depression New criteria for the diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease • MCI- Prodromal Alzheimer’s Disease – Minimal cognitive abnormalities – Increased conversion rate to dementia. – Prodromal dementia has replaced “Pre-Dementia” • Biomarker – Defined: Objectively measured and evaluated criteria, identifying specific brain pathology common to Alzheimer’s disease. – No clinical signs or symptoms of cognitive impairment. “Pre-Clinical” Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) • Usually impairs only one cognitive domain 15% Convert to AD – Most often memory (aMCI) • Insidious in onset • Does not impair social or professional skills • If multiple cognitive domains impaired then high probability for AD conversion MCI Outcomes 1 Year 40% Unchanged 20% Improve 4 6/3/2013 Biomarker Criteria: • A significant abnormality of episodic memory of at least 6 months duration • At least one of the following: 1. Temporal lobe atrophy on MRI 2. Abnormal FDG/PET biparietal hypometabolism 3. Abnormal PET/CT amyloid imaging: 4. CSF (decreased beta-amyloid, increased tau) 5. Blood or serum analysis – not yet available Dubois et. al. Lancet Neurology, 2007, Vol 6, 734 Shaw et al. Ann.of Neurology. 2009, vol. 65, 403 Changes in Biomarkers over Time Biomarkers establish progression of disease 5 6/3/2013 *The course of AD pathology is likely to be 20 to 30 years* Ethical consideration & Opportunities for treatment M.W. Weiner et al./Alzheimer’s & Dementia 8 (2012) S1-S68 Biomarker- MRI • MRI- Magnetic Resonance Imaging • Visualization of Brain Structure • Detection of Atrophy in specific brain regions M.W. Weiner et al./Alzheimer’s & Dementia 8 (2012) S1-S68 6 6/3/2013 Biomarker- FDG/PET •PET/CT (Positron Emission Tomography) •FDG (Flurodeoxyglucose) Detects glucose hypometabolism Biomarker- Amyloid Imaging Amyvid (Florbetapir F 18) • Binds to Aβ protein • Enables diagnosis of Aβ plaque before death Biomarker- CSF • CSF-Cerebral Spinal Fluid • Decreased β-amyloid 42 • Increased Tau 7 6/3/2013 Biomarker-Blood or Serum Analysis? Decreased Connectivity by DTI Alzheimer’s and Dementia, July 2008 Vol.4 p.265 John Dougherty and Yongxia Zhou AD MCI NC Lowest FA Highest FA Green: PCC ROI Red: Fiber tracts connecting ROI to the whole brain Amyloid in the healthy aging Brain Amyloid Positive Amyloid Negative All subjects have normal cognition K.M. Rodrigue et al./ Neurology 78 (2012) 387-395 8 6/3/2013 Biomarkers detect conversion rates to Alzheimer’s Disease + Amyloid - Amyloid All subjects had MCI + Amyloid subjects had more hippocampal atrophy and ventricular enlargement + Amyloid subjects progressed to Alzheimer’s disease - Amyloid subjects did not progress to Alzheimer's disease in a median timeframe of 1.7 years. CR Jack et al., Brain (2010) 133. Cognitive Screening Tests • MMSE: Mini-Mental State Examination • CST: Computerized Screening Test • MoCA – Montreal Cognitive Assessment Early detection is critical! MMSE • No test for verbal fluency • Heavily weighted towards orientation • Poor evaluation of executive function 9 6/3/2013 185 CST is a Validated Cognitive Tool Computerized Cognitive Self Test Verbal Fluency – Animals 29 Cholinesterase Inhibitor Delays Conversion from MCI to AD first 24 months MMSE Score (Changes from baseline) 12mo 24mo 36mo Cholinesterase Inhibitor -0.31+/-2.* -0.98+/-2.* -2.31+/-3 Placebo -0.80+/-2. -1.49+/-2. -2.75+/-4. *P<0.05 N Engl J Med 2005;352:2379-88. 10 6/3/2013 Preventive Treatments in Alzheimer's Disease Anti-oxidative agents: • Vitamin E •Folate Supplement •Fish •Omega-3 Fatty Acids Anti-inflammatory agents: • NSAIDs: Ibuprofen Cholesterol lowering agents: • Statins Preventive Treatments in Alzheimer's Disease *Exercise* Physical & Mental Aerobic Exercise Benefits Cognition •Hippocampus is vital for memory function •Increased CBV (Cerebral Blood Volume) in a specific region of the hippocampus, the Dentate Gyrus • Increased CBV correlates to Angiogenesis and Neurogenesis. •Exercise increases episodic memory performance 40 min aerobic exercise 4X a week for 12 weeks Pereira AC, Huddleston DE, Small SA et al., PNAS 104:13 (2007) 5638-5643 11 6/3/2013 Physical Exercise • • • • • • Brisk Walking Indoor Cycling Water Aerobics Light Weights Gardening Vacuuming 4 Hours Per Week Mental Exercise • • • • • • Read Books Crossword Puzzles Chess Scrabble Sudoku Attend Cultural Events •plays •museums •athletic events 12 6/3/2013 Healthcare Crisis Today • At present 5.2 million people in the United States have AD. • 60% of all nursing home admissions are the result of a dementing illness, most commonly AD. • AD is the sixth leading cause of death in the United States. • The total lifetime cost of care for a patient with AD is estimated to be in excess of $274,000. • The total cost of care in the United States for patients with AD is currently estimated to be >$700 Billion. • Estimated 35.6 million people worldwide living with dementia Alzheimer’s disease and the Healthcare Crisis • As many as 60% of the patients with AD may go undiagnosed In the primary care setting1 • As many as ~40% of the diagnosed patients may not receive pharmacologic treatment 2 1 Knopman et.al.Journal American Geriatrics Society 2000;48: 300 2 Datamonitor 2002 Forecast of Alzheimer’s Disease Prevalence in the U.S. 2000 2030 2050 4.5 Million (est) 7.7 Million (est) 13.2 Million (est) 65-74 Years 75-84 Years 85+ Years Source: Hebert LE, et al. Arch Neurol. 2003;60:1119-1122. 13 6/3/2013 Delay the Onset Alzheimer's disease usually develops slowly, taking many years to get to the point where symptoms become noticeable and Alzheimer’s disease is most common in the elderly population. If we could delay the onset of AD for 5 years, we would in effect reduce the number of patients with Alzheimer’s disease by one half (We can currently delay the symptoms of Parkinson’s disease 3- 5yrs) (AD prevention and evidence based medicine) Benefits of Early Diagnosis • Increase Communication Inform patient and family of diagnosis Treat with cholinesterase inhibitors Manage and treat behavioral problems • Institute plan for non pharmaceutical treatments Exercise Nutrition Cognitive stimulation Behavioral therapy Treat all medical problems aggressively • Cost reduction VA Study in Minneapolis shows that early screening and diagnosis of memory problems results in a dramatic decrease in cost of care over the life time of a Alzheimer’s patient Pharmaceutical Treatment Strategies • Start with cholinesterase inhibitor – Patch has few side effects – Donzepil is generic • Create personalized treatment plan based on cognitive domains affected • Add Namenda at moderate to severe AD classification if cholinesterase inhibitors appear no longer effective. 14 6/3/2013 Primary Care Physicians • Identify patient through screening: benign atypical Alzheimer’s disease or vascular dementia. Geriatric population Insidious onset Slowly progressive Few behavioral issues • Follow up every 6 months Repeat cognitive test to track progression Follow up with medication and activities of daily living Neurologist consultation is generally not necessary Primary Care Physicians • Refer patients to Neurologists with the following clinical profile Early onset Alzheimer’s (less than 60) Patients with another primary degenerative dementia i.e. frontotemporal, diffuse Lewy body and vascular dementia Presentation of hallucinations or social inhibition Sources for Assistance • Alzheimer’s Tennessee – Day program – Assisted living facilities – Support groups • Clinical trials • Caregiver support is vital 15 11:10 AM – 11:55 AM ‘Falling Down: Falls and Gait Disorders in Older Adults’ Monica K. Crane, M.D. Clinical Assistant Professor of Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Tennessee Medical Center‐Knoxville, Associate Director, Senior Assessment Clinic Director of Research, Cole Neuroscience Center Knoxville, TN Understand the prevalence and clinical importance of falls Understand the risk factors for falls Know how to conduct an office gait assessment Become familiar with different gait disorders associated with falls Notes: 6/5/2013 Falling Down: Falls and Gait Disorders in Older Adults Monica K. Crane, MD Associate Director Senior Assessment Clinic, Cole Neuroscience Center, UTMC Alzheimer’s TN SYMPOSIUM 5/29/13 Objectives 1. Understand the prevalence and clinical importance of falls. 2. Understand risk factors. 3. Know how to conduct an office gait assessment. 4. Become familiar with different gait disorders. 5. Prevention. Fall: coming to rest inadvertently on the ground or at a lower level. • One of the most common geriatric syndromes. • Most falls are not associated with syncope. 1 6/5/2013 Q: Is falling a part of normal aging? Camicoli R, Moore MM, Sexton G et al. Age-related changes associated with motor function in healthy older people. JAGS. 1999;47:330-334. A: No. But falls are common in older adults. Camicoli R, Moore MM, Sexton G et al. Age-related changes associated with motor function in healthy older people. JAGS. 1999;47:330-334. How common are traumatic falls? • 1/3 of older adults (65+) have traumatic fall. • 50-66% of these falls occur at home • 30-56% of patients in long-term care settings fall within the first 6 weeks after admission. • 50% of nursing home patients will fall. Stevens JA. Fatalities and injuries from falls among older adults — United States, 1993–2003 and 2001–2005. MMWR 2006;55(45). Vellas BJ, Wayne SJ, Romero LJ, Baumgartner RN, Garry PJ. Fear of falling and restriction of mobility in elderly fallers. Age and Ageing 1997;26:189–193. Donald IP, Bulpitt CJ. The prognosis of falls in elderly people living at home. Age and Ageing 1999;28:121–5.King MB, Tinetti ME. Falls in community-dwelling older persons. JAGS. 1995;43:1146-1154. Verghese J, LeValley A, Hall CB, Katz MJ, Ambrose AF, Lipton RB. Epidemiology of gait disorders in community-residing older adults. JAGS. 2006;54:255–261. 2 6/5/2013 Why should we care? • Falls are the #1 cause of accidental death in older adults. • Up to 10% of patients with a hip fracture will die within 30 days of surgery and 30% will be dead within one year. Jager TEWeiss HB, Coben JH, Pepe PE. Traumatic brain injuries evaluated in U.S. emergency departments, 1992– 1994. Academic Emergency Medicine 2000;7(2):134–40. Tinetti ME, Williams CS. Falls, injuries due to falls, and the risk of admission to a nursing home. New England Journal of Medicine. 1997;337:1279–1284. Dargent-Molina P, Favier F, Grandjean H, Baudoin C, Schott AM, Hausherr E, Meunier PJ, Breart G. Fall-related factors and risk of hip fracture: the EPIDOS prospective study. Lancet. 1996;348:145–149 Peter V Giannoudis, Erich Schneider AO Principles of Fracture Management. 2007. , Why should EVERYONE care? Fall cost Americans nearly $40,000,000,000 every year Bohl et al. The Gerontologist (2012) 52 (5): 664-675. Stevens JA, Corso PS, Finkelstein EA, Miller TR. The costs of fatal and non-fatal falls among older adults. Inj Prev. 2006;12:290–295. Alexander BH, Rivara FP, Wolf ME. The cost and frequency of hospitalization for fall-related injuries in older adults. American Journal of Public Health 1992;82:1020–3. Who is at risk? 3 6/5/2013 Risk factors • • • • • Age > 80 Orthostasis Fear of falling History of falls/syncope Polypharmacy – Sedatives, opiates, benzodiazepines, anticholinergics, etc • Gait instability • History of CVA, PD, or dementing illness • Alcohol • Environmental • Incontinence • Visual impairment Bell AJ, Talbot-Stern JK, Hennessy A. Characteristics and outcomes of older patients presenting to the emergency department after a fall: a retrospective analysis. Medical Journal of Australia 2000;173:176–7. Hausdorff JM, Rios DA, Edelber HK. Gait variability and fall risk in community-living older adults: a 1-year prospective study. Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 2001;82(8):1050–6 Tinetti ME. Clinical practice. Preventing falls in elderly persons. New England Journal of Medicine. 2003;348:42–49 Verghese J, Wang C, Lipton RB, Holtzer R, Xue X. Quantitative gait dysfunction and risk of cognitive decline and dementia. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry. 2007;78:929–935. Fear of falling Q: Do older adults worry about falls? A: 80% of older women preferred death to a “bad” hip fracture resulting in nursing home admission BMJ2000;320doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.320.7231.341(Published 5 February 2000) Common gait disorders Alexander NB. Differential diagnosis of gait disorders in oler adults. Clin Geriatr Med. 1996;12:697-698. Alexander MB. Gait disorders in older adults. JAGS. 1996;44:434-451. 4 6/5/2013 Gait disorders at low sensimotor level Classification Condition Gait findings Peripheral Sensory neuropathy ataxia Uncoordinated (posterior column, peripheral neuropathy) Weaving or drunk gait Hesitant Vestibular ataxia Visual ataxia Peripheral motor Arthritis Avoids weight bearing on affected side Painful hip may produce Trendelenburg gait (trunk shift over affected side) Peripheral neuropathy: B12 deficiency •B12 deficiency associated with diminished proprioception and ataxia in adults; CBC may be normal • Improvement within 2-3 mos of B12 Rx if any improvement at all •Reversibility depends on severity and duration Alcohol and Gait Disorders •Severity of gait disorder related to duration and quantity of alcohol consumption. •Peripheral neuropathy and cerebellar degeneration may occur independently or simultaneously. •Both gait & neuropathy may improve with abstinence. 5 6/5/2013 Gait disorders at mid/high sensimotor level Classification Condition Gait findings Parkinson’s disease Shuffling, hesitation, festinating, retropulsion, en bloc turns, arm swing Cerebellar ataxia Wide-based, trunk sway, irregular stepping on turns Cautious gait Wide-based slow gait, shortened stride (looks like shuffling), maintains appropriate postural responses Frontal & Small white matter vessel disease disease/ CVD FTD) NPH Gait ignition failure, short shuffling steps with arm swing intact; wide-based posture FTD – frontal gait: unable to maintain upright posture; autonomic failure; muscle atrophy Gait changes in Parkinson’s Lewy Body Dementia – Symptoms and gait changes that resemble Parkinson’s. – Degeneration of autonomic system. – Considerable cortical degeneration similar to Alzheimer’s disease. 6 6/5/2013 Gait management for PD •Rule out drug-induced parkinsonism •Rolling walker is usually most appropriate assistive device •Exercise may improve balance & gait •Avoid carrying items in arms Cerebellar disorders • Most often, vascular or alcohol-related • Truncal ataxia without limb dysmetria often seen with atrophy or infarction of vermis. • Individual muscle strength normal, tone normal; finger to nose, heel to shin often normal. • Benzodiazepines worsen gait; 28-fold increase in fall risk! Alzheimer’s disease • Cautious gait – Hesitant, slow gait – With severe disease a gait apraxia occurs • Visuospatial deficits • Balint’s syndrome 7 6/5/2013 VASCULAR DEMENTIA Vascular dementia • Large vessel disease (post-stroke) • Small vessel disease – Executive function problems – Gait disorder • Gait ignition failure, short shuffling steps with arm swing intact; widebased posture – Depressive symptoms – Emotional lability – Memory problems Progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) KEY FEATURES •FALLS and postural instability within 1st year of diagnosis. • Vertical supranuclear opthalmoparesis • Upward gaze paresis with abnormal saccadic eye movements. •Axial rigidity •Cognitive decline Dudley Moore (1935-2002) 8 6/5/2013 Fall and gait assessment in your office Stevens JA. Falls among older adults—risk factors and prevention strategies. NCOA Falls Free: Promoting a Natio Falls Prevention Action Plan. Research Review Papers. Washington (DC): The National Council on the Aging; 200 http://www.cdc.gov/ncipc/factsheets/adultfalls.htm Office visit: HISTORY • • • • • • Fall time, location, pain Medications Vision problems Vestibular: dizziness, lightheadedness Auditory: decreased hearing, tinnitus Cerebellum: alcohol, movement disorder • Basal ganglia: Slowed movements, tremor • Sensory: imbalance in the dark, numbness • Strength: proximal muscle weakness, leg/foot weakness, difficulty climbing stairs and getting out of a chair, fatigability Gait specific physical exam tests 1. Finger to nose 2. Rapid alternating movements 3. Heal knee shin 4. Get up and GO 5. Hallway walk and tandem gait 6. Rhomberg test 7. Postural stability 8. Functional reach 9 6/5/2013 1. Finger to nose (cerebellar) • The patient is asked to touch their nose, then the doctor’s finger in rapid succession. • Hold your finger at the extreme of the patient's reach and move your finger to different locations. • Repeat L side. • Dysmetria = inability to perform point-to-point movements due to over or under projecting ones fingers. 2. Rapid alternating movements • Have patient pronate and supinate the palms of his or her hands on the thigh. Once the patient understands this movement, tell them to repeat it rapidly for 10 seconds. • Dysdiadochokinesis = inability to perform rapidly alternating movements. • Dysdiadochokinesia is usually caused by MS or cerebellar lesions. – Patients with other movement disorders (e.g. Parkinson's disease) may have abnormal rapid alternating movement testing secondary to akinesia or rigidity, creating a false impression of dysdiadochokinesia. 3. Heal knee shin • With the patient supine (preferred) instruct him to place the right heel on left shin just below the knee; then slide heal down the shin to the foot and back. Repeat with L foot, • An inability to perform this motion in a relatively rapid cadence is abnormal. • Abnormal test if there is loss of motor strength, proprioception or a cerebellar lesion. 10 6/5/2013 4. Get up and Go test • Get up and Go Test – Record the time it takes a person to: 1. Rise from a hardbacked chair without use of arms 2. Walk 10 feet 3. Turn 4. Return to chair and sit down • Normal if ≤ 10 sec • Most frail elderly adults can complete in 11-20 sec • ≥ 14 sec = increased falls risk • > 20 sec = recommend further eval 5. Hallway and tandem walk Hallway walk Observe the patient’s: 1. Arm swing 2. Heel distance 3. Leg stiffness 4. Lifting of feet Tandem gait: Walk heel to toe across the room. Heel Walking: Sensitive way to test for foot dorsiflexion weakness Toe Walking: best way to test early foot plantar flexion weakness. 6. Rhomberg Test • Have patient stand still with their heels together. Ask the patient to remain still and close their eyes. • If the patient loses their balance, the test is positive. 11 6/5/2013 7. Postural stability Have patient stand still with their heels together. Ask the patient to remain still with EYES OPEN. If the patient loses their balance, the test is positive. 8. Functional Reach • With feet shoulder width apart, raise arm 90 degrees to front and reach as far as possible while maintaining stability • Inability to reach 7” is predictive of falls How can I prevent a fall in my home? 12 6/5/2013 Patient-specific strategies to reduce falls • Environmental change – Lighting in halls, night lights – First floor setup – Add stair rails (25% of falls occur on stairs) • Hazard reduction – remove rugs, use non-slip bathmats, safer footwear, Archives of Physical Medicine 2001;82(8):1050–6 Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry. 2007;78:929–935. How can I lower my risk of a fall and a hip fracture? • Get adequate calcium and vitamin D – from food and/or from supplements. • Assistive devices if needed. • Get screened and treated for osteoporosis. • No physical restraints – Does not prevent falls – Increases morbidity, mortality, length of stay • Exercise!! Archives of Physical Medicine 2001;82(8):1050–6 Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry. 2007;78:929–935. LSVT BIG therapy 13 6/5/2013 LSVT BIG™ in Parkinson’s • Physical training program with large amplitude body movement (Bigness). • Improves amplitude (trunk rotation/gait) that generalizes to improved speed (upper/lower limbs), balance, and quality of life. • LSVT BIG is delivered by PT or OT in four 1 hour sessions/week for four weeks. • LSVT BIG trials report improvement in motor movement months after the therapy was completed. • B. G. Farley and G. F. Koshland, “Training BIG to move faster: the application of the speed-amplitude relation as a rehabilitation strategy for people with Parkinson's disease,” Experimental Brain Research, vol. 167, no. 3, pp. 462–467, 2005. Exercise improves MOVEMENT! Questions? 14 12:50 PM – 1:40 PM ‘Lewy Body Dementia Challenges and Management’ Karen A. Mullins, D.O. Physician Knoxville Neurology Clinic Knoxville, TN Understand criteria for diagnosis of LBD Understand challenges of treatment of LBD Appropriately treat and manage LBD Notes: NOTES: 1:40 PM – 2:30 PM ‘Frontotemporal Dementia Update: Diagnosis and Management’ Monica K. Crane, MD Clinical Assistant Professor of Medicine, Department of Medicine University of Tennessee Medical Center‐Knoxville, Associate Director, Senior Assessment Clinic Director of Research, Cole Neuroscience Center Knoxville, TN Understand the prevalence of FTD Understand key symptoms associated with behavioral variant FTD Review new genetic associations in FTD Discuss treatment options for FTD Notes: Frontotemporal dementia update: Review and New Data Monica K. Crane, MD Associate Director Director of Research Cole Neuroscience Center Assistant Professor, UTMCK Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) Overview • • • • Background and clinical definition Prevalence FTD clinical subtypes Neuropathology and genetics of Frontotemporal lobe dementia (FTLD) • Treatment updates “Dementia That's Neither Alzheimer's Nor Easy” Normal Alzheimer's FTD FDG-PET images of metabolic activity: healthy controls, AD, and FTD. Scale red (high FDG uptake)-yellowgreen-blue (low FDG uptake). Photo Credit: Dr. Janet Miller, Dr. Suzanna Lee, MGH/ Harvard, Radiology Rounds April 2006 1 FTD = a clinical neurodegenerative disease affecting frontal & temporal lobes http://www.uphs.upenn.edu/ftd FTD International Research Criteria 1. Early behavioral disinhibition 2. Early apathy or loss of motivation 3. Loss of emotional recognition, sympathy, empathy 4. Perseverative, compulsive, ritualistic behavior 5. Hyperorality/ dietary change 6. FTD neuropsych profile 7. Frontal and/or anterior temporal atrophy on MRI or other radiologic findings 8. Presence of a known mutation Brain 2011: 134; 2456–2477 Mendez and Perryman, 2002; Mendez et al., 2007; Rascovsky et al., 2007a; Piguet et al., 2009), the International Behavioural Variant FTD Criteria Consortium (FTDC) revised guidelines for the diagnosis of bvFTD. FTD Prevalence FTD: Alzheimer’s disease (AD) ratio is 1:1 in those aged 45-65. Ratnavalli et al. Neurology 2002. FTD is more common that AD below age 60. Knopman et al. Neurology 2004. FTD spectrum comprises near 15% or more of the total dementia cases. Boxer AL, Miller BL. Alzheimer Dis Assoc Disord. 2005. 2 >50% of FTD subtypes misdiagnosed as primary psychiatric disease Woolley et al. J Clin Psychiatry. 201; 72(2): 126–133. Figure. % of patients initially misdiagnosed prior to ND diagnosis Frontotemporal dementia subtypes • Behavioral variant (bvFTD) • Semantic dementia (SD) • Progressive nonfluent aphasia (PNFA) • Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP) • Corticobasal degeneration (CBD) • FTD with motor neuron disease (FTDMND) Boxer AL, Miller BL. Clinical features of frontotemporal dementia. Alzheimer Dis Assoc Disord. 2005;19 S1:S3-6 Behavioral Variant FTD 3 Behavioral variant FTD (bvFTD) • 60% of FTDs are bvFTD – "Pick's disease” is term only reserved for a small subset of autopsy confirmed FTLDs with Pick bodies. B Clinical genetic and pathological heterogeneity of frontotemporal dementia J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry Seelaar et al; doi:10.1136/jnnp.2010.212225 Clinical Features of bv-FTD • Gradual onset • Impaired judgment and planning • Apathy • Impaired insight • Loss of empathy and emotion recognition • Disinhibition • Abnormal eating behavior • Stereotypical or ritualistic behavior • Personal neglect Is it AD or FTD? • Patients with clinical bvFTD most likely to have FTLD pathology if: – – – – Early executive dysfunction (first problem) Early personality changes Apathy Disinhibition • Patients with clinical bvFTD most likely to have AD pathology if: – Early age of onset – Neuropsychiatric features without personality changes – Greater memory difficulties rather than executive dysfunction Bathgate el al 2001; Diehl, Kurz 2002; Mourik et al 2004; Chow et al 2009; Rascovsky et al 2011; Rieddijk et al 2009; Piquet et al 2009 4 Clinical Features FTD AD Behavior & Social problems Early disinhibition Mild, increase with disease severity Motor signs Common Unusual Mood Apathy, irritability Depression Psychotic features Somatic, religious, bizarre delusions Delusions increase with disease severity Appetite/ hunger/diet Overeating, weight ↑↑; carbohydrate craving Weight loss, anorexia; misses meals Muangpaisan W. Geriat Aging. 2007; McKhann MG et al. Arch Neurol 2001; Muangpaisan W et al. Neuro J Thai 2003 IFTD: Loss of Fear and Disgust in bvFTD • What is the anatomy underlying abnormal emotional recognition in FTD? • Previous fMRI studies isolate 2 areas: Fear = amygdala Disgust = insula Presented at iFTD 2012: Discrete Neural Correlates for the Recognition of Basic Emotions in FTD, Fiona Kumfor, Australia Neuroimaging (fMRI) results by emotion (response to Eckman 60 and Caricatures) Presented at iFTD 2012: Discrete Neural Correlates for the Recognition of Basic Emotions in FTD, Fiona Kumfor, Australia 5 Neuroimaging (fMRI) results by emotion Fear: Right amygdala and ACC Disgust: Left insula and temporal pole Anger: Left superior temporal sulcus Sadness: Subcallosal cingulate Presented at iFTD 2012: Discrete Neural Correlates for the Recognition of Basic Emotions in FTD, Fiona Kumfor, Australia Conclusion of emotions and FTD • Deficits in emotion recognition: bvFTD Semantic dementia Progressive nonfluent aphasia • Negative emotions more severely affected than positive emotions in bvFTD. • Deficits due to atrophy across multiple discrete brain regions in the frontal and temporal lobes. Presented at iFTD 2012: Discrete Neural Correlates for the Recognition of Basic Emotions in FTD, Fiona Kumfor, Australia VIDEO example of bvFTD Agnosia of facial expression 6 Semantic dementia and the aphasias ANCIENT GREEK ἀΦΑΣΊΑ (ἄΦΑΤΟΣ, ἀ- + ΦΗΜΊ) "SPEECHLESSNESS“ AN IMPAIRMENT OF LANGUAGE ABILITY Semantic dementia (SD) LEFT predominance •Language features: fluent speech but loss of word choice RIGHT predominance • Profound deficits in understanding emotional expression • Difficulty recognizing faces • Loss of empathy Clinical genetic and pathological heterogeneity of frontotemporal dementia J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry Seelaar et al; doi:10.1136/jnnp.2010.212225 7 Semantic dementia and music • How does SD affect recognition of famous tunes and musical emotions? • Aspects of music cognition relies on the anterior temporal lobe (ATL) bilaterally. • Findings contribute to our understanding of the neurobiology of semantic memory. Left: naming, verbal fluency, musical emotions Right: famous people/ famous tunes, emotions Patterson et al 2007. Where do you know what you know? The representation of semantic knowledge in the human brain. Nature Review Neuroscience. 8(12), 976-987. Higher order aspects of music processing, (recognition of famous tunes) affected in SD Hsieh Brain 2011; Weinstein Arch Neurol 2011 Semantic dementia and music Memories, feelings of music in Semantic Dementia , S Hsieh, Australia • Emotional sounds produce greater physiological responses as measured by pupilometry in healthy controls • Semantic dementia patients: – Impaired subjective emotional ratings of normally emotional sounds – Loss of normal increased physiological responses to emotive sounds Neural basis of music knowledge: evidence from the dementias. Hsieh S, Hornberger M, Piguet O, Hodges JR. Brain. 2011 Aug 21. PMID:21857031 Conclusion: Semantic dementia and emotions • Recognizing famous tunes and emotions in music is impaired in SD and associated with bilateral anterior temporal lobe (ATL) atrophy • Music recruits areas in the brain known to be important verbal semantics • Processing aspects of music is part of verbal knowledge Patterson et al 2007. Where do you know what you know? The representation of semantic knowledge in the human brain. Nature Rev Neuroscience. 8(12), 976-987. 8 Progressive Nonfluent Aphasia (PNFA) Progressive nonfluent aphasia (PNFA) • 20% of FTD cases • Hesitant, effortful speech; stutter or return of childhood stutter • Anomia, agrammatism, sound errors (“gat” for “cat”) • Eventually develop severe movement disorder that overlaps with PSP and CBD Marcel Ravel, (1875-1937) French composer. Ravel was in the early stages of PNFA/FTD when composing the orchestral work Boléro (1928). Progressive nonfluent aphasia (PNFA) Case 1 Case 2 Coronal T1 weighted MRI: Case 1: mild PNFA, atrophy of temporal lobe & frontal operculum. Case 2: moderate PNFA, global atrophy with L-sided and perisylvian predominance. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry Seelaar et al; doi:10.1136/jnnp.2010.212225 9 Primary Progressive Aphasia (PPA) subtypes Nonfluent agrammatic PPA (PNFA) Semantic variant PPA Logopenic PPA At least 1 must be present: 1.Agrammatism 2.Apraxia of speech Both must be present 1.Impaired confrontation naming 2.Impaired single-word comprehension Both must be present 1.Impaired single word retrieval 2.Impaired repetition of sentences and phrases At least 2 of 3 features: At least 3 of 4 features: At least 3 of 4 features: 1.Impaired syntax 2.Spared comprehension of single words 3.Spared object knowledge 1.Impaired object knowledge 2. Dyslexia or dysgraphia 3. Spared repetition 4. Spared motor speech 1.Phonologic errors 2.Spared single word comprehension and object knowledge 3.Spared motor speech 4.Absence of agrammatism Gorno-Tempini 2011; Physiological phenotyping of auditory emotion processing in canonical syndromes of FTLD, Phillip Fletcher, UK Four types PPA speech therapy Errorless Learning • Passive Errorful learning • Active – What is this? – Where does it live? – What is its name. Record errors. – TIGER. Please repeat. – This is a round yellow juicy citrus fruit – It tastes sour. – LEMON • Active **BEST** in SD – – – – – – Is this a fruit? Is it round? Is it juicy? Is it red? Is it an APPLE? Please repeat. • Passive – This is not a giraffe, not a lion, not a hippopotamus. – It does not live in the water or the dessert. – What is it? Record errors. – HORSE. Please repeat Best Novel Therapy for PPA • Example of patient focused therapy for a piano teacher • Front of card • Back of card – Piano. – The instrument I play. – It has white and black keys and a pedal. – I teach (name) how to play piano. Results: improved performance on treated words with improved naming and comprehension. (Jakel et al 2006) 10 • • • • • • Summary: Principles of language treatment Greater success with personally relevant items (possible maintenance of gains with practice?) Semantically or phonologically based treatment successful. Patient is involved in item selection. More effective in patients with partially spared semantics (SvPPA). Incorporate retrained vocabulary into daily life. Errorless active approach more effective than traditional errorful approach for SvPPA. Progressive Supranuclear Palsy Progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) KEY FEATURES •Postural instability •Falls • Vertical supranuclear opthalmoparesis • Upward gaze paresis with abnormal saccadic eye movements •Axial rigidity •Cognitive decline Dudley Moore (1935-2002) 11 Corticobasal degeneration Corticobasal Degeneration (CBD) criteria Core • Cortical dysfunction – Ideomotor apraxia – “Alien limb” – Sensory hemineglect – Asymmetric myoclonus – Non-fluent aphasia • Extrapyramidal dysfunction – Asymmetric rigidity lacking and focal dystonia Supportive Features • Cognitive decline with preserved memory • MRI: Asymmetric atrophy of parietal & frontal cortex • FDG-PET: ↓ glucose uptake in parietal, frontal cortex, basal ganglia & thalamus. Neuropathology 12 Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration (FTLD) = FTD with histopathology • Associated with biochemical abnormalities of at least 3 proteins (tau, TDP-43, FUS) – The term Pick’s disease can only be used for FTLD with Pick bodies. • Each protein is associated with different pathologies & different genetic abnormalities. • Wide range of clinical syndromes with heterogeneous pathologies. – Hypothesis: clinical and imaging markers that may predict pathology Tau immunopositive inclusions in FTLD Pick inclusion bodies in FTLD Pick's disease. (A) Round, circumscribed, amphophilic Pick bodies seen on H and E-stained sections, but are more easily visualized in (B) highlighted with silver stains (arrow). Reynolds M R et al. J. Neurosci. 2006;26:10636-10645 TDP-43 and FUS proteinopathies TDP-43/FUS pathology: numerous neuronal cytoplasmic inclusions (NCIs), with marked reduction of nuclear TDP43 but also of nuclear FUS staining (see arrowheads) in the dentate granule (DG) cells of the hippocampus Dormann D, Haass, C. TDP-43 and FUS: a nuclear affair. Trend in Neurosciences. 2001:34:339-348. 13 Can we link clinic FTD to pathology to genetics? Rohrer Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 1822 (2012) 325–332 Genetics Human chromosomes and autosomal dominant mutations 14 FTD inheritance Genetic (40%) 10-15% have a single gene mutation (autosomal dominant inheritance) Sporadic (60%) First in the family to have FTD (family not at risk) http://www.theaftd.org/wpcontent/uploads/2009/02/Genetics-PieChartv3-2012-new.jpg FTD is heterogenous: Genes→pathology→ clinical syndrome Seelar H, Rohrer LD, Pijnenburg YAL, Fox NC, can Swieten JC. Clinical, genetic and pathological heterogeneity of frontotemporal dementia: A review. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2010. 5 single gene mutations – MAPT gene • c17 makes tau – GRN gene (PGRN) • c17 makes progranulin – VCP gene • c9 codes for valosin-containing protein – CHMP2B gene • c3 makes multivesicular body protein 2B (chromatin modifying protein 2B). – TARDBP gene • c1produces transactive response DNA-binding protein, 43-kDa molecular weight (TDP-43) – C9ORF72, unknown function 15 MAPT gene mutation • Tau maintains the structure of neurons but mutation causes tau to clump abnormally. • MAPT mutation patients have MORE hippocampal atrophy than AD patients. – Presymptomatic carriers followed for over 17 years. – Decline in episodic and working memory. Mahoney et al. IFTD 2012 Poster Evolution of brain atrophy in – Clinical syndrome of bvFTD 66 MAPT mutation carriers. and FTDP-17. GRN mutations • 5-10% of all FTLD ,13-25% of familial FTLD • Reduced progranulin production (haploinsufficiency) and increased neuronal inclusions made of TDP-43 and ubiquitin. • GRN mutations are associated with bvFTD, PNFA and movement disorders but generally NOT MND/ ALS C9ORF72 – GGGGCC repeats in the open reading frame – Mutation leads to TDP43 positive pathology. – 20 -67% of familial ALS, 7% of sporadic ALS. – 25% of familial FTD, 5% of sporadic FTD. (Majounie et al 2012) 16 C9ORF72 origins • Unknown physiologic function. • People with mutant variant share a haplotype containing dozens of single-nucleotide polymorphisms in the region surrounding the C9 gene, many scientists suspect a single founder. – C9ORF72 began expanding 6,300 years ago, but said it could have been any time between 1600 and 16,500 years ago (Smith et al 2012, Ishiura et al 2012, Tsai et al 2012) – Shared haplotype itself is somehow predisposed to repeat expansions. C9ORF72 • Symptomatic: Age 50, 9%; Age 85, 74% of carriers • Clinical: ALS with bulbar symptoms, bvFTD, or FTD with parkinsonism. • Genetic anticipation – Occurs in 1/4 of kindreds carrying the C9ORF72 variant. – Children with symptom onset 7 years earlier than parent, possibly from repeats growing in successive generations. Investigational drugs and vitamin therapies 17 Memantine Study Subjects Design Outcome cognition Outcome behavior Boxer et al 2009 21 bvFTD, 13 SD, 9 PNFA n= 43 Open 26 wks 20mg N/A Transient improvement in NPI for bvFTD Diehl-Schmid et 16 bvFTD al 2008 Open 6 months 20mg ADAS-cog increased No change in NPI, FBI Vercelletto et al 2011 Phase II 52 wk random DB placebo No difference No difference Phase IV 26wk random, multicenter DB placebo controlled In progress In progress 49 bvFTD (23 treatment, 26 placebo) NCT0054947 Antidepressants Study Subjects Design Outcome cognition Deakin et al 2004 10 bvFTD 6 wks paroxetine 40mg Worse No difference NPI paired learning, or FBI reversal learning, pattern recognition 16 bvFTD 14 months of paroxetine 20mg versus piracetam 1200mg Moretti et al 2003 8 with paroxetine, 8 with piracetam Lebert et al 2004 26 bvFTD Trazadone Random placebo control 12wk Swartz et al 1997 11 bvFTD 3 months open label: fluoxetine paroxetine, sertraline Outcome behavior Paroxetine improved No effect Improved NPI Improved disinhibition, depression, compulsions, less carb cravings Antipsychotics • Antipsychotics have a statistically significant benefit for behaviors in FTD. (Curtis and Resch 2000, Fellgiebel 2007) • Open label study with olanzapine in 17 bvFTD patients over 24 months, showed improved behavioral symptoms. (Moretti et al 2003) 18 Clinical studies in progress • DB placebo controlled randomised parallel group, 12 month safety and efficacy trial of TRx0237 (tau aggregation inhibitor) in bvFTD (NCT01626378). • Phase I dose finding study of intranasal oxytocin in bvFTD (NCT01386333). Oxytocin mediates social behavior. • Effects of tolcapone on FTD (NCT00604951). Tolcapone increases dopamine. Potential treatments (Vossel and Miller 2008) Protein Target Drugs Disease stage MAPT Inhibit tau kinases Lithium, valproic acid preclinical Inhibit/reverse tau aggregation Anthraquinones, drug discovry, phenylthiazolylhydrazides, Tau some phase III Rx trials Reduce tau expression Several compounds preclinical Block tau cleavage Calpain inhibitor A-705253 preclinical immunosuppression FK-506 preclinical Alter chaperone system to enhance tau degradation Hsp90 preclinical Interfere with splicing to normalize 3R & 4R ratio Splicing regulators preclinical Stabilize microtubules Paclitaxel preclinical Potential treatments Protein Target Progranulin Ribosomal readthrough of PTC124 premature termination of codons preclinical Regulate progranulin levels Screening of compounds preclinical Block proteolytic cleavage Elastase inhibition preclinical Immune therapy, block cleavage Screening of compounds preclinical TDP-43 Drugs Disease stage 19 FTD Non-rx management • • • • • • Education Med-alert bracelet Occupational and financial advice Genetic counseling if relevant Specific driving advice Environmental modification – Visual, hearing, mobility aids, continence aids • Behavioral intervention (communication aids, routines, reassurance) • Caregiver support The central problem in all neurodegenerative disease… How do protein alterations (an autopsy finding) or a manifest is an actual patient in your clinic? Can we predict pathology from the clinical presentation (clinical Questions? 20 2:45 PM – 3:35 PM Parkinson’s Disease and Premotor Symptoms Michelle L. Brewer, M.D. Knoxville Neurology Clinic Knoxville, TN Notes: NOTES: 3:35 PM – 4:20 PM Speaker Panel John Dougherty, Jr., M.D., Medical Director, Cole Neuroscience Center, University of Tennessee Medical Center, Knoxville, TN Monica K Crane, M.D., Clinical Assistant Professor of Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Tennessee Medical Center‐Knoxville; Associate Director, Senior Assessment Clinic; Director of Research, Cole Neuroscience Center, Knoxville, TN Nancy Britcher, L.C.S.W., Knoxville, TN Open discussion Notes: NOTES: 2013 Symposium Exhibitors Accera Pharmaceuticals Alzheimer’s Tennessee Amedisys Home Health Blount Memorial Hospital CADES – Concord Adult Day Enrichment Services Choices in Senior Care Clarity Pointe The Courtyards Senior Living Covenant Senior Health East TN Personal Care Gentiva Home Health Home Helpers Homewatch CareGivers Howard Circle of Friends Adult Day Program Kay Senior Care Center King College Nursing Program Lifeguard Ambulance Service Manorhouse Morning Pointe of Lenoir City MountainBrook Village National Library of Medicine Novartis Personal Care Choices Raintree Senior Health and Care Senior Solutions Silver Angels Smoky Mountain Hospice United Healthcare The University of Tennessee Medical Center, Brain and Spine Institute, Cole Neuroscience Center West Hills Health and Rehab Williamsburg Villas