L16 Dementia Flashcards
What is the official definition of dementia?
GLobal deterioration of intellectual function in the face of unimpaired consciousness
The person is awake and not just memeory issues
How do we approach and evaluate someone with dementia? (7)
General medical history
General neurological history
Neurobehavioural history
Psychiatric history
Toxic/nutritional/drug history
Family history
Objective examination (physical/ neurological/ NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL)
What are the two bedside tests that are conducted? What are the domains of cognition that are tested?
Mini-mental status examination
Montreal Objective Cognitive Assessment
LOC (awake?)
Orientation (time/ place/ people)
Memory (remote/recent/immediate, 3 object recall)
Attention and concentration (serial 7s, digit span)
Knowledge/ insight
Language (fluency, comprehension, repetition, object naming, apraxia, reading/ writing)
TRUE OR FALSE
The symptoms of dementia are unrelated to the part of the brain that is reflected
FALSE
The symptoms always reflect the part of brain that is affected
Usually the frontal, parietal, and temporal lobes
Which common difficulty in dementia is reflective of parietal cortex involvement?
Visual-spatial difficulties (test the ability to conceptualize object that they should draw)
Neurological examination usually reveals abnormal reflexes related to dysfunction of frontal lobe. What are four reflexes that are affected?
- Pout reflex: tap lips with tendon hammer and pout respond
- Glabellar reflex: patient cannot inhibit blinking in response to stimulation (touch between eyes)
- Grasp reflex: stroking palm of hand induces grasp
- Palmo-mental reflex: quick scratch on palm of hand induces sudden contraction of mentalis muscles in face
What are the two ways to think about causes/types of dementia?
- The part of the brain that is most affected (frontal vs parietal lobes/ cortex’s)
- The rapidity of progression of the dementias
What types of symptoms/ of dementia is associated with the anterior part of the brain? (frontal lobe)
Frontal pre-motor cortex
Behavioural changes or loss of inhibition, antisocial behaviour, facile and irresponsible
Frontotemporal dementia (Pick’s)
Huntington’s disease (caudate nucleus)
What types/ symptoms of dementia is associated with the posterior part of the brain? (parietal and temporal lobes)
Disturbance of cognitive functions (memory and language) without marked changes in behaviour
Alzheimers
How many causes of dementia are there? What are they?
- Degenerative
- Cerebrovascular
- Structural
- Infections
- Toxic/ metabolic
- Immune disorders and cancer
- Depression (maybe not a cause, but always a co-morbidity)
What is involved in the degenerative cause of dementia?
Dysfunction of glial cells and neurons in the brain (Alzheimer’s, Lewy Body dementia, Huntingtons, parkinsons, wilsons, Tauopathies)
80-90% of all dementias
What is involved in the cerebrovascular cause of dementia?
Vascular dementia (multi-infarct dementia)
CNS vasculitis
Usually a stroke causes some element of cognitive dysfunction and gets worse with every stroke
What is involved in the structural and infections causes of dementia?
Structural: normal pressure, hydrocephalus, brain tumour, head injury, subdural hematoma
Infections: Creutzfeldt- Jacobs, HIV, Herpes, neurosyphilis
What is another test that is usually done to treat dementia?
Lab investigations (bloodwork, syphilis, HIV, neuroimaging, EEG, cerebrospinal fluid)
What are 4 common themes that run in dementia?
- There is usually an age-dependent progression and worsening of dementia reflecting loss of neurons and their connections in the CNS
- Some parts of the brain and neurons within these regions are more vulnerable to the insult (areas that use acetylcholine, SN)
- Proteins that are misfolded and abnormally deposited in specific brain areas seem to play a key role in these diseases
- For the most part, precise causes unknown and hence no definitive treatment available to stop progression of disease