10.22 Elderly Psychiatric Disorders Flashcards
What is a major neurocognitive disorder?
According to the DSM-V
- Evidence of significant cognitive decline
- Relative to previous level of functioning
- In one or more cognitive domains
- These deficits interfere with independence in everyday activities
Neurocognitive domains
- complex attention
- executive function
- learning and memory
- language
- perceptual-motor
- social cognition (social awareness as humans)
What is a mild neurocognitive disorder?
- Evidence of modest cognitive decline
- Relative to previous level of functioning
- In one or more cognitive domains
- These deficits does not interfere with independence in everyday activities but require more effort or compensatory strategies
Types of Dementia / Major neurocognitive disorders
- Frontotemporal lobar degeneration (front part of brain shrink -> personality change)
- Vascular (vessel wall thickening) -> stroke
- Lewy body (little alpha-synclein) -> location in brain
- Alzheimer’s (inflammation)
- Parkinson’s with dementia
Risk factors in major/mild neurocognitive disorders
1. Psychosocial (environment)
- education
- smoking
- physical inactivity
- social isolation
2. Biological
- neurotransmitters
- abnormal protein formation
- brain atrophy
- vascular abnormalities
- genetic / epigenetic
3. Other
- vascular risk factor control (diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, hypertention)
- depression
- hearing loss
Biological abnormalities in major/mild neurocognitive disorders
Genetic and epigenetic variation
- Apo E4 variants
- Autosomal dominant mutations
Neurotransmitter abnormalities
- Dopaminergic systems (parkinson’s, fronto-temporal lobar)
- Acetylcholine (Ach) {Alzheimer’s and Lewy body}
- Glutamatergic (Vascular MNCD)
Vascular abnormalities
- Cerebral ischemia
Abnormal proteins
- Amyloid plaque (beta-amyloid 42)
- Abnormal Tau proteins (neurofibrillary tangles)
- Alpha-synclein
Brain atropy
- Loss of connective relationship
- loss of delicate balance
Risk factors for demetia based on life stages
Birth
- ApoE 4 allele
Early life
- less education
Midlife
- hearing loss
- hypertension
- obesity
Late life
- smoking
- depression
- physical inactivity
- social isolation
- diabetes
The neuroanatomical changes associated with Major/mild Neurocognitive Disorders
COMPLEX ATTENTION - Pre-frontal complex
PERCEPTUAL MOTOR - Occipital lobe
LANGUAGE - Frontal/Temporal and parietal lobe helps to formulate what you want to say, and the motor cortex enables you to articulate the words
LEARNING AND MEMORY - Hippocampus (limbic system next to the medial temporal lobe)
EXECUTIVE FUNCTION - Prefrontal regions of the frontal lobe
SOCIAL COGNITION - Pre-frontal cortex