Frontotemporal Dementias Flashcards

1
Q

Frontotemporal dementias

A

group of neurodegenerative disorders that leads to deterioration of the anterior temporal and/or frontal lobes resulting in behavioral changes, language dysfunction, and/or motor deficits.

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2
Q

Biomarkers of frontotemporal dementias

A

40% caused by an abnormal accumulation of tau protein

BUT more than half of FTDs are tau negative and are caused by an abnormal accumulation of TDP-43 protein

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3
Q

Age of diagnosis of frontotemporal dementias

A

Known for being a younger-onset dementia syndrome

FTD = onset 40s - 50s
Alzheimer’s = onset after 65

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4
Q

FTDs are commonly divided into three variants according to the symptom pattern, which are?

A

Behavioral variant
language variant
motor variant

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5
Q

FTD Behavioral Variant

A

previously referred to as Pick’s disease

progressive, focal degeneration of the bilateral frontal and temporal brain regions, and/or the presence of argyrophilic globular inclusions (Pick bodies; clumps of protein that builds up) and swollen, achromatic neurons (Pick cells).

Pick bodies and Pick cells can be found in frontal/temporal neocortex, amygdala, globes pallidus, etc.

bvFTD of three FTD variants is the most common (about half of all FTD cases) and occurs more frequently in men than women.

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6
Q

Presentation and course of FTD Behavioral Variant

A

Initial changes in personality and emotion regulation, two subtypes:

apathetic subtype - reduced motivation, lack of interest in prior activities, progressive social isolation, decreased empathy,

disinhibited subtype - disinhibition (e.g., overspending), impulsivity (e.g., inappropriate comments in public), hyperorality (especially for sweet foods), repetitive motor movements, and perseverative behaviors.

rarely results in hallucinations/delusions (compared to schizophrenia)

Executive/generation deficits with relative sparing of memory and visuospatial functions

generally lack awareness of deficits

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7
Q

pathophysiology and incidence of FTD Language Variant

A

Most cases of PPA have tau-positive, ubiquitin/TDP-43-positive frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) pathology or AD pathology

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8
Q

The language variant of FTD is commonly referred to as…?

A

primary progressive aphasia (PPA)

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9
Q

Three subtypes of FTD language variant

A

nonfluent/agrammatic variant (also called progressive nonfluent aphasia [PNFA]) - syntax difficulties, paraphasic errors, pitch distortions, and flawed grammar in writing and speech. difficulty comprehending complex sentences can also be apparent.
- d/t deterioration in the left posterior frontal and insular regions

semantic dementia (also called temporal variant FTD or semantic variant FTD) - semantic dementia - naming deficits (impaired confrontation naming) with loss of single word knowledge (typically for objects) and eventually progresses to loss of person recognition.
- deterioration in the bilateral anterior temporal region

logopenic variant (also called logopenic progressive aphasia and phonological variant PPA). - logopenic variant - anomia without loss of word knowledge, but there is also difficulty with sentence/phrase repetition and often phonologic errors.
- pathology involving the left temporoparietal regions

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10
Q

FTD language variant/primary progressive aphasia symptoms

A

characterized by initial and prominent language deterioration with relative preservation of other cognitive abilities until late in the disease process

presents with marked word-finding difficulty, decreased performance on word list generation tasks, problems with verbal comprehension, and dysarthria.

Reading and writing abilities typically remain preserved longer than speech.

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11
Q

distinguishing the logopenic from the semantic variant.

A

Logopenic has relatively spared grammar, object knowledge, and single word comprehension

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12
Q

distinguishing the logopenic from the progressive nonfluent variant

A

Logopenic has spared motor speech

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13
Q

Progression of FTD semantic variant in terms of language functions

A

deficits in object knowledge begin with loss of the ability to finely distinguish between types of objects (e.g., types of animals such as a tiger and a lion)

progresses to a broader difficulty making such distinctions (e.g., the difference between a tiger and an alligator)

progresses to a loss of knowledge of the word and the category (e.g., a loss of knowledge of what tigers are and what animals are).

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14
Q

FTD Motor Variant subtypes

A

progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) - most common

corticobasal syndrome (CBS)

FTD with motor neuron disease (FTD-MND)

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15
Q

progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP)

A

most common FTD Motor Variant subtype d/t astrocytic lesions, tau-positive neurofibrillary tangles, and neuropil threads within the brainstem and basal ganglia.

Supranuclear vertical gaze palsy (impaired downward and upward gaze) which may be perceived as blurred vision

Bradykinesia Rigidity

Swallowing problems

Frequent falls

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16
Q

corticobasal syndrome (CBS)

A

FTD Motor Variant subtypes

Limb apraxia (asymmetric presentation initially)

Alien limb syndrome

Cortical reflex myoclonus

Cortical sensory impairment

17
Q

FTD with motor neuron disease (FTD-MND)

A

FTD Motor Variant subtypes

Dementia (impaired memory and executive functions)

Speech production deficits

Significant disinhibition

Personality changes

18
Q

Agrammatism

A

The inability to speak grammatically, typically because of simplified sentence structure and errors in tense, number, and gender. Speech may include omission of function words (known as telegraphic speech).

19
Q

Surface dyslexia

A

An inability to recognize words as a whole, resulting in failure to read irregularly spelled words that cannot be sounded out phonetically.

often contrasted with phonological dyslexia.

20
Q

treatment of choice for bvFTD

A

SSRIs and/or SNRIs

21
Q

Corticobasal syndrome (CBS) is characterized by asymmetrical atrophy of

A

bilateral premotor cortex, superior parietal lobules, and striatum

22
Q

bvFTD phenocopy syndrome

A

Diagnosed when possible bvFTD does not progress to dementia and neuroimaging findings remain stable over time.

23
Q

bvFTD criteria

A

must have three core behavioral/cognitive changes

frontal and/or temporal degeneration/hypoperfusion on neuroimaging

genetic or pathological evidence

24
Q

Which type of tests would likely show low to extremely low performance in semantic dementia?

A

tests assessing word knowledge and object knowledge

25
Q

Which condition is considered by some to be a variant of frontotemporal dementia yet by others is considered a form of Alzheimer’s disease?

A

logopenic variant

26
Q

Frontotemporal dementia with motor neuron disease is characterized by ubiquitin and/or tau pathology?

A

ubiquitin-based