10.22 Elderly Psychiatric Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

What is a major neurocognitive disorder?
According to the DSM-V

A
  1. Evidence of significant cognitive decline
  2. Relative to previous level of functioning
  3. In one or more cognitive domains
  4. These deficits interfere with independence in everyday activities
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2
Q

Neurocognitive domains

A
  • complex attention
  • executive function
  • learning and memory
  • language
  • perceptual-motor
  • social cognition (social awareness as humans)
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3
Q

What is a mild neurocognitive disorder?

A
  1. Evidence of modest cognitive decline
  2. Relative to previous level of functioning
  3. In one or more cognitive domains
  4. These deficits does not interfere with independence in everyday activities but require more effort or compensatory strategies
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4
Q

Types of Dementia / Major neurocognitive disorders

A
  1. Frontotemporal lobar degeneration (front part of brain shrink -> personality change)
  2. Vascular (vessel wall thickening) -> stroke
  3. Lewy body (little alpha-synclein) -> location in brain
  4. Alzheimer’s (inflammation)
  5. Parkinson’s with dementia
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5
Q

Risk factors in major/mild neurocognitive disorders

A

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

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6
Q

Biological abnormalities in major/mild neurocognitive disorders

A

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

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7
Q

Risk factors for demetia based on life stages

A

Birth
- ApoE 4 allele

Early life
- less education

Midlife
- hearing loss
- hypertension
- obesity

Late life
- smoking
- depression
- physical inactivity
- social isolation
- diabetes

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8
Q

The neuroanatomical changes associated with Major/mild Neurocognitive Disorders

A

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

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