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Focal Syndromes

Focal Syndromes. Dr Stephen Pearson Consultant in Old Age Psychiatry Devon Partnership Trust. The Syndromes. bv frontotemporal dementia Semantic dementia Progressive aphasia. bv frontotemporal dementia. Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) Frontal/behavioural variant FTD ( bv FTD)

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Focal Syndromes

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  1. Focal Syndromes Dr Stephen Pearson Consultant in Old Age Psychiatry Devon Partnership Trust

  2. The Syndromes • bv frontotemporal dementia • Semantic dementia • Progressive aphasia

  3. bvfrontotemporal dementia • Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) • Frontal/behavioural variant FTD (bv FTD) It has become apparent that conventional frontal lobe tests based largely on executive abilities (planning, set-shifting, problem solving) are not very sensitive to the beginnings of this behavioural form of FTD. Recent research has focussed on ways of measuring the alterations in social conduct, emotion processing and complex decision making

  4. bv frontotemporal dementia II • Assessments: carer based interview schedules or questionnaires • Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI) • Frontal Behavioural Inventory (FBI) • Cambridge Behavioural Inventory (CBI)

  5. bv frontotemporal dementia III • Controversy over precise location of pathology Long assumed orbital cortex bears the brunt, but recent imaging has emphasised the role of the mesial surface. Some symptoms regarded as frontal may, in fact, be secondary to amygdala or insula damage

  6. Progressive Aphasia • Primary Progressive Aphasia, described in patients with focal left temporal lobe or periSylvian atrophy • Gradually became clear that a spectrum of disease and within this spectrum there were two identifiable and distinct aphasic syndromes: • Progressive non-fluent aphasia (PNFA) • Semantic dementia – sometimes referred to as progressive Fluent Aphasia

  7. Progressive Non-Fluent Aphasia (PNFA) • Speech is halting and distorted with frank phonological and syntactic errors. • Comprehension mirrors output in that single word (semantic) comprehension is relatively intact but patients have difficulty understanding syntactically complex sentances. Oro-buccal apraxia commonly accompanies the language disorder.

  8. Semantic Dementia • Speech remains fluent and well articulated but becomes progressively devoid of content words. The language and other non-verbal cognitive deficits observed in these fluent aphasic patients reflect a breakdown in semantic memory. Hence semantic dementia, first coined by Snowden in 1989.

  9. Semantic Memory • The component of long term memory that represents our knowledge about things in the world and their inter-relationships, facts and concepts as well as words and their meaning.

  10. Pathology • Clinical MND have ubiquitin positive inclusion pathology • SD typically associated with ubiquitin positive disease but only a minority develop clinical MND • bv-FTD unpredictable pathology

  11. Corticobasal degeneration (CBD) • Described in 1968, initially believed to be a movement disorder • Early parkinsonism • Asymmetric akinetic rigid syndrome • Apraxia • Alien limb • Tau positive pathology (as do majority PNFA)

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