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Dementia. DefinitionDomains of dementiaEpidemiologyCausesPathology of dementiasTreatmentEvolving directions. Definition of Dementia. Dementia (DSM-IV). Memory impairmentImpairment in one other cognitive domain (aphasia, apraxia, agnosia, executive dysfunction)Acquired (not presented througho
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1. Diagnosis and Management of Alzheimer’s Disease Jeffrey Cummings, MD
Mary S. Easton Center for Alzheimer’s Disease Research
Deane F. Johnson Center for Neurotherapeutics
David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA
Los Angeles, California, USA
2. Dementia Definition
Domains of dementia
Epidemiology
Causes
Pathology of dementias
Treatment
Evolving directions
3. Definition of Dementia
4. Dementia (DSM-IV) Memory impairment
Impairment in one other cognitive domain (aphasia, apraxia, agnosia, executive dysfunction)
Acquired (not presented throughout life)
Disabling (occupational, social)
Not present only during delirium
Not attributable to a primary psychiatric illness (e.g., major depression, schizophrenia, etc)
5. Dementia is Recognized by Mental Status Examination Attention (impaired in delirium)
Digit span
Concentration
Memory impairment
Orientation (time, place)
3 word learning test with delayed recall
6. Dementia is Recognized by Mental Status Examination Language
Spontaneous speech
Naming
Comprehension (1,2,3 step command)
Repetition
Visuospatial skills
Copy figures (overlapping pentagons, cube)
Draw a clock
Executive function
Judgment, insight
Word list generation (animals named per minute)
7. Dementia is Recognized by Mental Status Examination Mini-Mental Status Examination (MMSE)
Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA)
Neuropsychological assessment
Dementia is under-recognized
Assumed to be normal aging
No mental status examination done
8. Domains of Dementia
9. Domains of Dementia
10. Domains of Dementia
11. AD is a Progressive, Fatal Illness
12. Epidemiology of Dementia
13. Epidemiology of Dementia
14. Epidemiology of Dementia US
5.5 million Alzheimer’s disease patients
2030 – 7.8 million AD patients
$148 billion now
$1 trillion annually by 2050
Global
35 million AD patients
2-30 – 65 million AD patients
15. Risk and Protective Factors Risk factors
Age
ApoE-4 genotype
Female gender
Hypertension, elevated cholesterol
Head trauma
Protective factors
Education
Exercise
Mental activity
16. Causes of Dementia
17. Causes of Dementia Alzheimer’s disease (55-70% of late-onset dementia)
Vascular dementia
Parkinson’s disease with dementia and related disorders
Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB)
Pathology of Parkinson’s disease and Alzheimer’s disease
Frontotemporal dementia (FTD)
Misc: trauma, alcohol, B12 deficiency, hypothyroidism, HIV, etc
18. Evaluation of Dementia to Determine Its Cause History
Current symptoms
Past history and treatments
Family history
Laboratory tests
B12 level
Thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH)
CBC, electrolytes, , blood sugar, BUN, liver function tests
Brain imaging
MRI or CT
19. Approaching the Differential Diagnosis of Dementia
20. Diagnosis of Alzheimer’s Disease Memory impairment
Impairment in one other cognitive domain (aphasia, apraxia, agnosia, executive dysfunction)
Acquired (not presented throughout life)
Disabling (occupational, social)
Gradually progressive
Not present only during delirium
Not attributable to a primary psychiatric illness or other cause of dementia
21. Pathology of Dementias
22. Pathology of Dementias Alzheimer’s disease
Brain atrophy
Neuritic plaques
Amyloid beta protein
Neurofibrillary tangles
Hyperphosphorylated tau protein
Loss of nerve cells
23. Brain Atrophy in Alzheimer’s Disease
24. Histopathology of Alzheimer’s Disease
26. Pathology of Dementias Vascular dementia
Ischemic white matter lesions
Small infarctions in basal ganglia, thalamus, white matter
Large infarctions
27. Pathology of Dementias Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) and PD dementia
Alpha-synuclein Lewy bodies in brainstem, cortex
Limited AD-type pathology in most
Frontotemporal dementia
Tau protein inclusions
TDP-43 protein inclusions
Other
28. Pathology of Dementias
29. Treatment of Dementias
30. Treatment of Alzheimer’s Disease Cholinesterase inhibitors (ChE-Is)
Donepezil (Aricept)
Rivastigmine (Exelon)
Galantamine (Razadyne)
NMDA receptor antagonist
Memantine (Namenda)
31. Treatment of Alzheimer’s Disease Symptomatic effects
Mild improvement and delay of decline
Cognition
Function (activities of daily living)
Behavior
Global measures
32. Treatment of Alzheimer’s Disease Many patients are treated (off label) with psychotropic agents
Antidepressants
Atypical antipsychotics
Care of the caregiver is an important aspect of patient management
33. Treatment of Alzheimer’s Disease Side effects
Cholinesterase inhibitors
Diarrhea
Nausea, vomiting
Memantine
Headache
Dizziness
Somnolence
34. Treatment of Non-AD Dementias
35. Evolving Research Directions
36. Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) Dementias are preceded by states of mild cognitive impairment
Memory impairment without functional loss
Not all MCI progresses to dementia
Some are stable in MCI state
Some improve
Some progress to AD (60% of MCI)
Some progress to non-AD dementias
37. New Criteria Allow Diagnosis of AD before Dementia Memory impairment
Progressive
Not attributable to another cause (e.g., hypothyrodism)
Biomarker evidence of AD as the cause of the “MCI”
Medial temporal atrophy on MRI
Parietal hypometabolism on FDG PET (bilateral)
Positive amyloid imaging
CSF with low amyloid and high tau/p-tau levels
38. MRI Demonstrates Brain Atrophy in Early Alzheimer’s Disease Hippocampal atrophy emphasized in this slideHippocampal atrophy emphasized in this slide
40. Amyloid Imaging Shows Deposition of Amyloid in Plaques
41. Disease-Modifying Therapies are Evolving for Alzheimer’s Disease Anti-amyloid therapies
Gamma secretase inhibitors (decrease production)
Aggregation inhibitors (prevent toxicity)
Immunotherapies (passive; vaccination)(remove deposits)
Tau-related therapies
Neuroprotective agents
Latreperdine/dimebon
Anti-oxidants
44. Summary
45. Summary Dementia is common among the elderly and growing in frequency
Dementia requires memory loss, loss in another cognitive domain and functional impairment
Dementia has many causes
Alzheimer’s disease is the most common cause of dementia
AD is treated with cholinesterase inhibitors and memantine