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TBI Notes Test III

TBI Notes Test III. You will do totally badass on this!!!. Alzheimer’s Disease (cortical dementia). Cortical type of dementia- outer portion of brain is where you see changes 6-30% in 65 years and older Incidence doubles every 5 years after 65 (age 90 high incidence)

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TBI Notes Test III

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  1. TBI Notes Test III You will do totally badass on this!!!

  2. Alzheimer’s Disease (cortical dementia) • Cortical type of dementia- outer portion of brain is where you see changes • 6-30% in 65 years and older • Incidence doubles every 5 years after 65 (age 90 high incidence) • 2-3xs more common in females (because we live longer) • Cause is unknown. (its genetic they think) • Affects hippocampus(WM) prefrontal area and anterior temporal lobe (similar to TBI)

  3. Alzheimer’s Disease • THESE THINGS FOUND POSTMORDEM • Neurofibrillary tangles- axons & dendrites atrophy and contorting • Senile plaque (internal structure of neurons)- changes within the neuron itself-debris within the cytoplasm exclusive to Down syndrome • Granulovacuolar degeneration (internal changes of the neuron)- look like sand and debris within cytoplasm exclusive to AD must have Senile and Granu. Usually affects pyramidal cells (responsible for: motor function) –for both SP and GD

  4. Possible Causes of AD • Aluminum Poisoning- • Immune System Problem- immune system attacks brain • Slow virus- chimpanzees show signs of Alzheimer’s. • Reduction in blood flow • Hereditary • Genetic

  5. AD • No cure • Early detection tests are better • Medications slow progression of AD, particularly memory loss

  6. AD- early stages • Decreased WM • Problems with judgement & reasoning “should I be driving?” • Disorientation to place and event • Changes in mood- more depressed • Communication- word finding deficits (anomia) • Decreased auditory comp • Difficulty with humor and sarcasm

  7. Goals for the Clinician early diagnosis and intervention allow the clinician to: • Improve the family/pt’s understanding—about the changes that are taking place in the family and pt. • Increase the family’s knowledge of AD. • Access community resources that help AD patients and caregivers. • Make plans for the future (e.g., financial and health care planning). • Increase your awareness of safety issues and health issues

  8. Educating Carers about AD-early stages • The following is a list of skills and tasks. The list is intended to help identify potential difficulties in order to help the family plan for future changes and continue living their life to the fullest. • Memory for recent events. Examples: remembering appointments, details of a recent conversation and names. • Carrying out tasks with multiple steps. Examples: managing money and balancing your checkbook, taking medications as prescribed, shopping and cooking. • Decision-making and problem-solving. Example: making quick decisions in response to an emergency, such as responding to a flood or fire in your home. • Spatial ability and orientation. Examples: following a map or following directions, judging the distance of objects while driving, and feeling lost in familiar environments. • Language. Examples: finding the right word, writing letters, understanding what you have read or what others have said. • Behavior and/or mood. Examples: loss of interest in new projects, withdrawing in social situations, feelings of anxiety and depression. Keep in mind that anxiety and depression are often treatable, so speak with your physician if these feelings arise.

  9. AD- Middle Stages • More about educating the caregiver, watching & monitoring for dysphagia • SUNDOWNERS SYNDROME- your sense of time changes. You become more active in the night. • Impaired intellect and cognition • Dysphagia- lack of initiation to eat, initiating bolus itself. • Weight loss

  10. AD- Middle Stages • Incontinence and bladder problems • Perseveration of ideas • Paraphasias because anomia gets worse • Empty speech- really vague terms • Circumlocution • Jargon starts to emerge • Changes in pragmatic skills

  11. AD- Late Stages • 1. Start to see motor problems • 2. Sensory perceptual issues- cant ask for help • 3. Incontinence- bladder and bowel • 4. Diminishing all cognitive skills • 5. Jargon- Rapid & incoherent speech • 6. Echolalia- repeat speech they’ve heard • 7. Perseveration of words or sounds • 8. Lose ALL lang abilities • Monitor for dysphagia- if they eat likely to get pneumonia. • Likely to die or pneumonia or infection

  12. Pick’s Disease (cortical) • Occurs in adolescents • Unknown etiology • Begins in adolescence & early 20’s • Pick bodies- changes in the neuronal cytoplasm • Enlarged neurons- anterofrontal & temporal lobes. • NO CURE- some meds help symptoms

  13. Pick’s Disease- initial stage • Changes in personality & emotion • Affect social behavior • Executive functions will change • Exhibit stereotypic sequences= OCD. • same movement over and over again. • Weight gain

  14. Pick’s Disease- Middle stages • Decreased intellect • Anomia • Circumlocution • Empty speech • Echolalia • Perseveration of ideas • Reduced comprehension both reading and auditory

  15. Pick’s Disease- final stages • Person becomes mute • Severe cognitive deficits • Die because of pneumonia or infection

  16. TREATMENT • Early stages- patients can work with you • Cognitive/commTx- if they can’t communicate we shouldn’t treat for comm. • Compensation of skills • Gradual decline- goals and responsibility fall on caregiver • Maintain skills- reminiscing therapy LT memories • Family education- will be difficult to family • Quality of life- if we aren’t there, they might have no one • Dysphagia- this is most important

  17. Subcortical Dementia’s(motor component!) • Basal ganglia, thalamus, brainstem • Problems with motor movement • Declining cognition • Based on family report (ie cognitive changes)

  18. Parkinson’s Disease (PD) • 1% of population • Changes in movement= different body parts • 50-65 yrs • Men> women • Can become disabled w/in 5 years of symptoms (rare) • 10-20 years after diagnosis- that’s when person can’t do their normal function • On/off symptoms • 40 types of PD (some with dementia)

  19. CAUSES OF PD • Degeneration of substantia nigra- loss of 90% of dopamine • Viral (encephalitis)- awakenings movie • Arteriosclerosis- hardening of the arteries • Carbon monoxide poisoning- looks like PD • Syphilis • Tumors-after removal, might get better

  20. Positive symptoms of PD • Not seen in a normal adult • Tremor at rest (pill rolling tremor) btwn thumb and index finger • Muscular rigidity • Involuntary movements- changes in posture, head turning, eye movement.

  21. Negative symptoms of PD (Absence of the behavior) • Poor posture • Difficulty with Righting- trouble getting out of bed. • Locomotion- shuffling of feet • Speech- changes in vocal intensity, they think they’re yelling at you. LSVT Therapy • Akinesia- slowness of movement • Lack of affect- can’t tell if happy or sad • Monotone • Festination- increasing speed • Dysphagia

  22. Treatment of PD • Sinemet, symmetrel- drugs for parkinson’s. Treats tremors. • Thalamotomy- sugery to remove tremors. Heated electrode ablates(kills tissue) area. Symptoms OK for 5 years. • Pallidotomy- globus pallidus, meant to reduce tremors. • Deep brain stimulation (pace maker)- implnt close to clavicle.

  23. Huntington’s Chorea(named after George Huntington) • 35-50 years • Hereditary- can do genetic testing • Rapid Progression • Rare • Chorea- involuntary movement, person figits and is restless. • Dementia- affects cognition • Personality changes- constantly complaining, finding fault, irritable, emotional outbursts. • Dysarthria- signs of weakness (as they talk.)

  24. Stages of HC • Cognitive change- change in WM & attention. • Language- appear intact, dysarthria present • Final Stages- • person becomes mute • Dysphagia • Incontinence • All cognitive areas affected

  25. AIDS related dementia(Acquired immunodeficiency virus encephalapathy) • HIV positive • Protease inhibitors- drug cocktails • Extrapyramidal symptoms- difficulty walking, signs of ataxia. • Cognitive deficits- similar to Alzheimner’s Disease. • Dementia

  26. Mixed Type Dementia(cortical & subcortical) • Vascular dementia • TIA’s- transient ischemic attack • Multiple CVA’s • Also have aphasia, apraxia dysarthria • If RCVA= left neglect, also cognitive deficits, hemiplegia or hemiparesis

  27. Mixed Type Dementia(cortical & subcortical) • Lacunar State- affect smaller arteries that supply blood to the subcortical areas (basal ganglia) • Lenticulostriate arteries • Dysarthria • Dysphagia • Pseudobulbar palsy- uncontrollable laughing or crying • Tremors • Intellect and language are preserved until later stages of the disease

  28. Questionable types of dementia • Isolation- from communication partners. SNF • Depression- if depression is severe enough it looks like dementia. • Poor nutrition • Medication • Health issues (diabetes) • Discussion of Korsakoff’s syndrome: dementia that looks like aphasia. From excessive drinking.

  29. Diagnosis & Assesment • Blessed Dementia Rating Scale (Hachinsky et. al) • Info from family caregivers, medical chart • Section 1- general ADL’s- how they function overall • Section 2- specific activities (ex- communication) • Severity and prescence of impairment ((might not be too accurate) • < or = unimpaired • Score up to 28 (total score) • Similar to a lot of outcome measures • VERY SUBJECTIVE

  30. Global Deterioration Scale(Reisberg et. al) • Completed by clinician or rehab team • Patient/family interview • SUBJECTIVE- more thorough that BDRS. • Info from other disciplines • Check Brookshire book for details.

  31. GDS stages • GDS stage 1 – NORMAL • GDS stage 2- very mild (forgetfulness, concerned about symptoms) • GDS stage 3- mild cog. deficits (early confusional with loss) • GDS stage 4- moderate (late confusional) • GDS stage 5- moderately severe (early dementia, requires assistance from others for survival) • GDS stage 6- severe (middle dementia) behavioral issues. Echolalia, jargon. • GDS stage 7- very severe (late dementia) no therapy. Bed bound, not eating safely

  32. Early Signs of Dementia • Scared about memory loss • Interview patient and family • Refer to neuropsych • Refer to gerontologist • Gradual onset- no sudden change • NO improvement over time. • Quality of life, most important thing…

  33. Dementia Tests • Arizona Battery for Communication Disorder of Dementia. (ABCD) for mild to moderate dementia. • Hard to give • Functional Linguistic Communication Inventory (FLCI) for moderate to severe dementia. • Includes greetings, writing naming, gestures etc. • Easy to score • Mini Mental Status Examination (MMSE) Score of 26 points or less (for cog deficits)

  34. Treatment of Dementia • Education- not rehab, but maintaining skills for as long as possible. • Stimulate all modalities of communication: • Auditory- music they like, things they heard on radio back in the day. • Visual- pictures. Can’t be portrait pics. Special moments. • Tactile- anything they played with as a child.

  35. Treatment of Dementia • Minimize distractions- if attentio is poor, can’t have lots going on. • Use short simple sentences when communicating with dementia patients. • Give ample time for responses. Their processing is slow.

  36. Dementia Continued… • Episodic Memory- emotional component LT stronger • Procedural Memory- great way to get convo going. • Semantic Memory- LT good, newer memories not so much. • MOST IMPAIRED: WM, Prospective memory (things in the future), temporal (time) knowledge. • MILD STAGES: compensate, use strategies • LATER STAGES: multi-modality communication

  37. Dementia Continued… • Organization, sequencing • Problem solving/judgement • Supervision • Safety • Language= hidden meanings? GDS 5/6 look for hidden meanings in words. Something they say might be important to them. • Redirect behaviors- BE CREATIVE • Talk to the family members • Change the subject • Give patient something else to do

  38. Memory Books • Names of family members • Personal Info- address, DOB, phone # • Names of medical professionals- that will be seeing them. • Calendar- simple to complex; day or month) • Pictures- action better than portrait. • Portable? • Simplify over time • Teach family to use it

  39. Counseling with Dementia • Family will start to feel inconvenienced and feel guilty about it. • We don’t counsel feelings- we DO counsel communication. • Validate feelings of anger. • We can educate them about what’s going to happen in the future • Prepare family & patient for what will happen. • They have to accept more responsibility. • They need a lot of repetition, things written down. • Alzheimer’s association website rocks..

  40. Early Stages: • refer to other professionals as needed. • Remember to discuss living will. • Middle Stages: • introduce idea of SNF. • Talk about what is necessary to supervise at home. • Still validate person’s feelings. • Continue to refer out as needed. • Start behavior mod (because they are verbally abusive or hitting). • Problem solve about safety issues. • Wandering an issue. • Still talk about a living will.

  41. Late Stages: • Dysphagia (eating safely) • Validate feelings of guilt • Support them • Talk about heroic measures (feeding, life support) • Consider hospice care. Dying with dignity.

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