Chapter 12 - Frontotemporal Degeneration Flashcards
1
Q
Frontotemporal dementia (FTD)
A
- a.k.a. frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) or Pick Disease
- involves problems w/ language, behavior, and/or motor findings
- has both language and behavior variants
2
Q
Epidemiology of FTD
A
- occurs before 65 y.o., usually around 50 y.o.
- definitive diagnosis done by autopsy
- survival is shorter in FTD than AZ
3
Q
Frontal Variant of FTD
A
- shrinkage of the frontal lobe causes:
- executive dysfunction (impulsiveness, lack of insight, sudden criminal behavior), social and interpersonal conduct problems (antisocial behavior), and apathy and/or disinhibition
4
Q
Primary Progressive Aphasia FTD
A
- expressive aphasia w/ word finding difficult, agrammatism, and phonetic paraphasias (sub similar sounds for each other)
- difficulty expressing language
- similar to Broca’s
5
Q
Semantic FTD
A
- temporal lobe variant
- impairment of semantic verbal memory (LTM, general facts) and associative agnosia (won’t know what to do w/ similar objs)
- similar behavioral symptoms as FVFTD
6
Q
Neuropathology of FTD
A
- frontal, temporal and caudate nucleus atrophy
- nigral pallor
- microvacuolation (holes due to loss of neurons)
- gliosis in frontal and/or temporal lobes
- no reduction in ACh, but could deplete serotonin
- Pick bodies in Pick disease
7
Q
Lewy Body Disease
A
- important cause of cog decline in older adults
- resembles AZ and Parkinsons
8
Q
Patients show cognitive deficits that reflect damage to the frontal lobe, like:
A
- learning and memory (retrieval of info)
- attention and concentration
- executive functioning
- language (verbal fluency, difficulty w/ COWA)
- visuospatial functioning
9
Q
Psychiatric features of LWD
A
- visual and auditory hallucinations and delusions
- depression, anxiety and apathy
- Capgras syndrome (won’t recognize loved ones, think they’ve been replaced by an imposter)
- Reduplicative paramnesia (think their location has been duplicated)
- decrease of REM, so will dream during wake cycles
10
Q
Motor features of LWD
A
- come much later than in Parkinson’s, but are very similar to Parkinson’s
- spontaneous parkinsonism (tremors and rigidity)
- deficit in learning and mem
- symmetric akinetic-rigid syndrome
- bradykinesia (difficulty initiating movements)
- facial masking
- decreased autonomic system function (lack of sweat, urinary incontinence, etc.)
11
Q
Cretzfeldt-Jakob Disease/Prion Disease/Spongiform encephalopathy
A
- subcortical dementia characterized by quick progression (death w/n a year)
- extremely rare
- human transmission via transplants of affected neural tissue (eating affected tissue) or there is a genetic form
12
Q
Neuropathology of CJD
A
- cerebellar and cerebrum damage (uncoordinated, difficulty walking)
- astrogliosis
- amyloid plaques
- abnormal prion proteins (misfold to create the abnormal prion that spreads its own DNA, causing other prions to misfold)
13
Q
What is the hallmark symptomology of CJD?
A
- motor symptoms that are caused by damage to the cerebellum
- uncoodrinated movement, slurred speech, tremors, choreiform grimaces, blindness, difficulty swallowing