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Dementia and Delirium
Neuro Assessment 10
64
Anatomy
Graduate
12/12/2011

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Cards

Term
Dementia
Definition
Impairment of intellectual/cognitive function of sufficient severity to interfere with social or occupational activites
Term
Delirium
Definition
Clouding of consciousness, with reduced capacity to shift, focus, and sustain attention to environmental stimuli
Term
Is Dementia a disease or a symptom?
Definition
symptom
(eventhough there are DSM IV Dx criteria)
Term
What are the DSM-IV Diagnostic criteria fro Dementia?
Definition
1. Impaired short and long-term memory
and/or
2. One of the Following
a. Impaired abstract thinking
b. Impaired judgment
c. other disturbance
3. Disturbances in 1 or 2 interferes with work or ADL
4. symptoms not occurring exclusively during delirium
5. Either:
a. evidence of organic cause
b. exclusion of non-organic mental disorder
Term
What are the DSM-IV Diagnostic criteria for Delirium?
Definition
1. Disorientation and memory impairment
2. Two of the following:
a. Perceptual Disturbances
b. Incoherent Speech
c. sleep-wakefulness cycle disturbances
d. increased/decreased psychomotor actvity
3. Acute Clinical Features - flucuate
4. Evidence of Organic disturbance
Term
What has key features of cognitive deficit in multiple domains that interferes with daily life, deterioration over months to years, and No disorder of alertness?
Definition
Dementia
Term
What has key features of an acute disorder, with deterioration over days to weeks, with flucuating altered level of consciousness, excitable,delusions, and hallucinations?
Definition
Delirium
Term
What are the Clinical characteristics of Delirium?
Definition
Acute Onset
Fluctuating Course
Days/Weeks
Altered Consciousness
Distracted
Hyperactive
Confused
Usually reversible
Term
what are the clinical characteristics of Dementia?
Definition
Insidious onset
Progressive Course
Months/Years
Consciousness Not impaired
Attention Normal
Normal Autonomic function
Impoverished Cognition
Usually irreversible
Term
What are the Causes of Dementia I?
Definition
Neurodegenerative Diseases
Vascular Dementia
Head Trauma
Drugs, Toxins, Ethanol
Brain Tumors
Term
What are the top 2 Neurodegenerative Diseases?
Definition
Alzheimer's Disease - (50-60%)
Dementia with Lewy Bodies - (10-15%)
Term
What are the Causes of Dementia II?
Definition
Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus
Infection
Metabolic Disorders
Nutritional
Term
What are the neuropathological findings of Alzheimer's Disease?
Definition
Loss of cerebral cortical neurons
Neuritic plaques containing B-amyloid
Neurofibrillary tangles
Term
What are the essential criteria for diagnosing Alzheimer's Disease?
Definition
Neuropsychological tests
Deficits in memory + areas of cognition
Progressive worsening of memory + one other cognitive function
No disturbances of consciousness
Onset 40-90 YO
Absence of other brain disease
Term
What are the cardinal features of Alzheimer's Disease?
Definition
Insidious onset
progressive course
early memory loss
Term
How can Alzheimer's Disease be diagnosed premorbidly?
Definition
purely clinical
(no definitive laboratory test)
Term
How is Alzheimer's Disease diagnosed Postmortemly?
Definition
Histological Evidence:
Neuritic plaques
Neurofibrillary tangles
Neuron loss
Term
Where can atrophy be found in the brain of a patient with Alzheimer's?
Definition
Parietal and Dorsal Frontal Temporal Lobe
Less severe Frontal pole
Term
What are Neuritic plaques?
Definition
Composed of dystrophic neurites containing tau aggregates mostly in straight filament form, surrounding a core of extra cellular amyloid
Term
What are Neurofibrillary tangles?
Definition
Cortical pyramidal cells filled with aggregated hyperphosphorylated tau protein
Term
What are characteristic findings in a Bielschowsky stain of human cortex form an Alzheimer's disease patient?
Definition
Neuritic Plaques
Neurofibrillary tangles
Term
Where is the highest abundance of Neuritic Plaques?
Definition
Parietal Lobe
Term
Where is the highest abundance of Neuritic Plaques?
Definition
Parietal Lobe
Term
Where is the highest abundance of Neurofibrillary Tangles found?
Definition
Temporal Lobe
Term
What Chromosomes are the 3 genes that Early onset Alzheimer's are associated with?
Definition
21, 14, 1
Term
What Proteins are associated with Early onset Alzheimer's?
Definition
Amyloid Precursor Protein (APP)
Presenilin 1
Presenilin 2
Term
What are the characteristics of Early onset Alzheimer's?
Definition
Autosomal Dominant
Begins before age 65
Progresses more rapidly
5-10% of Alzheimer's patients
Term
What chromosomes are the 3 risk factor genes of Late onset, sporadic, Alzheimer's?
Definition
19, 12, 10
Term
What chromosome encodes Apolipoprotein E4?
Definition
Chromosome 19
Term
What protein participates in cholesterol transport, and is a risk factor for Alzheimer's?
Definition
Apolipoprotein E4
(contributes to 50% of late onset AD)
Term
Based on the Kaplan-Meier curve, by what age are people that have homozygosity for ApoE4 assured to develop AD?
Definition
80 years
Term
What genotype is 2nd most likely to develop AD?
Definition
E3/E4
Term
What genotype is least likely to develop AD?
Definition
E2/E3
Term
What are the Strong Risk factors for Alzheimer's Disease?
Definition
Age
Genetics
Down Syndrome
Term
What are Weak Risk factors for Alzheimer's Disease?
Definition
Education level, mental inactivity
Female gender
Head injury
Hypercholesterolemia
Smoking
Term
What nucleus is noted to become atrophic in Alzheimer's patients?
Definition
nucleus basalis
(nucleus of Meynert)
Term
What does the Nucleus Basalis innervate? With what?
Definition
Neocortex
NT - Ach
Term
Where are levels of Ach found to be decreased in AD patients?
Definition
Nucleus Basalis and Neocortex
Term
What type of drugs can be used to increase neuronal activity in the neocortex?
Definition
AchE antagonists
BuchE antagonists
Term
What do astrocytes secrete that cleaves Ach?
Definition
butyrylcholinesterase
Term
What are Lewy Bodies?
Definition

eosinophilic Spherical inclusions w/ halo appearance located in the cytoplasm of neurons

 

Parkinson's Disease - substantia negra

Lewy Body Dementia - neocortex

Term
What are Lewy Bodies comprised of?
Definition
Neurofilament proteins
a-synuclein
ubiquitin
Term
What is Dementia with Lewy Bodies?
Definition
Clinical characteristics of Parkinson's Disease with...
Early Presenting Dementia -
hallucinations
delusions
cognitive fluctuations
Term
Where are Lewy bodies found in DLB patients?
Definition
neocortex
Term
Why should neuroleptic agents be avoided in DLB patients?
Definition
DLB patients are extremely sensitive to them
Term
What Dementia is characterized by atrophy of the frontal and temporal lobes?
Definition
Fronto-temporal Dementias
Term
What is the hallmark pathological feature of Fronto-temporal Dementias?
Definition
Neurofibrillary tangles
Pick Bodies - ubiquitin and hyper-phosphorylated Tau proteins
Term
What form of Dementia has prominent personality and behavioral changes, with less memory loss early in the course?
Definition
Fronto-Temporal Dementias
Term
What are some common behavior and conduct distrubances found in FTD?
Definition
loss of personal awareness
Loss of social comportment
disinhibition
impulsivity
distractibility
hype-orality
social withdrawal
stereotyped or preservative behavior
speech output change
Term
What type of Dementia displays early prominent primitive or frontal reflexes on physical exam?
Definition
Fronto-temporal Dementias
Term
What are the 4 Diseases included in Fronto-temporal Dementias?
Definition
Pick's disease w/ or w/o Pick's bodies
FTD w/ Parkinsonism
Corticobasal Ganglionic Degeneration
Progressive Supranuclear Palsy
Term
What are the 3 principal varieties of Fronto-temporal Dementias?
Definition
Frontal Variant FTD
Semantic Dementia
Progresive non-fluent aphasia
Term
Why is FTD commonly misdiagnosed if semantic dementia and progressive non-fluent aphasia are present, frontal variant is not?
Definition
these subtypes do not have prominent behavioral or personality dixturbance like the frontal variant FTD
Term
What is the age of onset for Pick's Disease?
Definition
5th decade
Term
What is the mutation that is found in the familial cases of Pick's Disease?
Definition
on chromosome 17 for Tau protein
Term
What are the characteristics of Pick's Disease?
Definition
Progressive loss of language and judgment w/ disinhibition, social misconduct, or withdrawal
Without anterograde amnesia
Term
What lobe is primarly involved in Pick's disease if there is an early loss of receptive language?
Definition
Temporal Lobe
Term
What symptoms are associated with Frontal Lobe Involvement?
Definition
Disinhibited, socially inappropriate
Impulsive
Compulsive
Hyperphagic/Oral
Hypo/Hypersexual
Non-fluent aphasia
Term
What symptoms are associated with Temporal Lobe Involvement?
Definition
Fluent (semantic) aphasia
Emotionally flat, apathetic
Term
What is the 2nd most common cause of Dementia?
Definition
Vascular Dementia
Term
What form of Dementia is caused by multiple infarctions involving either or both large vessels and small vessels?
Definition
Vascular Dementia
Term
What are cases of Vascular Dementia typically found in?
Definition
Diabetes mellitus
hypertension
coronary heart disease
peripheral artery disease
Term
What type of dementia has a high incidence in untreated or poorly treated hypertension?
Definition
Vascular Dementia
Term
What Folstein Mini-Mental status exam score should raise concern of imparied cognition, depression or both?
Definition
<27
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