dementia Flashcards
What is dementia?
Severe loss of memory and other cognitive abilities that impair daily function
What is the most common cause of dementia in elderly? Second commonest?
Alz in elderly followed by vascular dementia
What is alzheimers disease? Is there a cure/treatment?
- Degenerative disorder with progressive cognitive, social and functional impairment.
- No cure but acetylcholinesterase inhibitors beneficial in early stages
What are some reversible causes of dementia (mimics)?
Delirium, depression, vitamin B12/B1/B6, alcohol related brain damage, infections
What is the process of dementia from start to dementia?
Pre-clinical period (brain changes but no symptoms) –> mild cognitive impairment –> dementia
Why can cognition vary in clinic?
Affected by various things like sleep, eating, infections
Why is it hard to accurately diagnose dementia in clinic?
Very heterogenous presentations. Elderly can present with various comorbidities
What are the molecules involved in dementia?
Aβ amyloid, Tau, a-synuclein
After being referred what are some things that need to be done during history taking?
Patient interview and collateral history - memory, visual skills, mood, motivation, eating, sexual behaviour, language, executive skills, visuo-spatial, personality etc
What are lilliputian hallucinations?
Hallucinations of human, animal or fantasy (tiny figures) during wakefulness
What is done during examination?
Mental & neurological examination
What are the cognitive tests used in dementia?
MMSE (mini-mental state examination) +ACE III (more memory focused, 15 minutes)
What bloods would be useful for dementia?
FBC, inflammatory markers, thyroid, renal function, vitamins, B12/folate, HIV, syphillis
What would be seen on MRI in alzheimer’s?
narrow gyri widened sulci, dilated ventricles, medial temporal volume loss bilaterally + hippoccampal volume loss (replaced by CSF - black)
Why are amyloid PET scans used?
To see amount of amyloid in brain.
Medium/high level –> more likely to have alz