dementia Flashcards

1
Q

What is dementia?

A

Severe loss of memory and other cognitive abilities that impair daily function

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2
Q

What is the most common cause of dementia in elderly? Second commonest?

A

Alz in elderly followed by vascular dementia

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3
Q

What is alzheimers disease? Is there a cure/treatment?

A
  • Degenerative disorder with progressive cognitive, social and functional impairment.
  • No cure but acetylcholinesterase inhibitors beneficial in early stages
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4
Q

What are some reversible causes of dementia (mimics)?

A

Delirium, depression, vitamin B12/B1/B6, alcohol related brain damage, infections

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5
Q

What is the process of dementia from start to dementia?

A

Pre-clinical period (brain changes but no symptoms) –> mild cognitive impairment –> dementia

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6
Q

Why can cognition vary in clinic?

A

Affected by various things like sleep, eating, infections

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7
Q

Why is it hard to accurately diagnose dementia in clinic?

A

Very heterogenous presentations. Elderly can present with various comorbidities

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8
Q

What are the molecules involved in dementia?

A

Aβ amyloid, Tau, a-synuclein

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9
Q

After being referred what are some things that need to be done during history taking?

A

Patient interview and collateral history - memory, visual skills, mood, motivation, eating, sexual behaviour, language, executive skills, visuo-spatial, personality etc

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10
Q

What are lilliputian hallucinations?

A

Hallucinations of human, animal or fantasy (tiny figures) during wakefulness

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11
Q

What is done during examination?

A

Mental & neurological examination

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12
Q

What are the cognitive tests used in dementia?

A

MMSE (mini-mental state examination) +ACE III (more memory focused, 15 minutes)

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13
Q

What bloods would be useful for dementia?

A

FBC, inflammatory markers, thyroid, renal function, vitamins, B12/folate, HIV, syphillis

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14
Q

What would be seen on MRI in alzheimer’s?

A

narrow gyri widened sulci, dilated ventricles, medial temporal volume loss bilaterally + hippoccampal volume loss (replaced by CSF - black)

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15
Q

Why are amyloid PET scans used?

A

To see amount of amyloid in brain.

Medium/high level –> more likely to have alz

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16
Q

What are possible diagnoses with dementia?

A

Alz, vascular dementia, dementia with lewy bodies, depression, FTD, delirium

17
Q

Management of dementia?

A

Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors, watch/wait, treat behavioural/psych symptoms, OT/social services, specialist therapies

18
Q

What are the differences between alzheimer’s, vascular dementia, dementia with lewy bodies, fronto-temporal dementia?

A
  • Alzheimers can present subtly with insidious amnestic/non-amnestic presentations.
  • Vascular is related to CV disease with step wise deterioration and multiple infarcts.
  • Lewy bodies involves cognitive impairment before or within a year of PD symptoms, visual hallucinations and fluctuation in cognition.
  • FTD is a behavioural variant with semantic dementia, non-fluent aphasia
19
Q

What other things should be ruled out when looking at dementia?

A

depression, delirium

20
Q

Pathophysiology of alzheimers?

A

Αβ amyloid is primary event and then tau mediated neuronal injury and dysfunction

21
Q

Correlation between amyloid plaque levels and dementia?

A

more amyloid plaque levels present, more likely alz

22
Q

Looking at CSF what can be seen in alzheimer patients compared to controls?

A
  • Beta-amyloid levels in CSF lower in alz than control.

- Tau levels in CSF higher in alz.

23
Q

What does alz typically involve?

A

Initial episodic memory deficits secondary to dysfunction of medial temporal lobe structures (eg hippocampus)

24
Q

What is dementia with lewy bodies associated with symptom wise?

A

Fluctuating cognition, visual hallucinations, REM sleep disorders, parkinsonian symptoms.

25
Q

What is dementia with lewy bodies caused by?

A

aggregation of alpha synuclein leading to deposition of lewy bodies

26
Q

how is lewy body dementia different to alz on MRI & DAT scans?

A
  • Hippocampus and medial temporal volumes preserved in lewy body dementia
  • DAT scan shows decreased availability of dopamine transporters in lewy body dementia
27
Q

What is fronto-temporal dementia associated with?

A

Non-fluent aphasia, personality changes, memory loss, changes in social behaviour, agrammatical speech

28
Q

What does an MRI show in fronto-temporal dementia?

A
  • Volume loss in temporal and frontal lobes.

- Perisylvian fissure usually asymmetric