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Alzheimer’s Disease

Alzheimer’s Disease. Most common and important degenerative disease of the brain Shrinkage in size and weight of the brain Severe degree of diffuse cerebral atrophy that evolve over the years are associated with dementia presenting with this disease. Clinical Features. Insidious in onset

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Alzheimer’s Disease

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  1. Alzheimer’s Disease

  2. Most common and important degenerative disease of the brain • Shrinkage in size and weight of the brain • Severe degree of diffuse cerebral atrophy that evolve over the years are associated with dementia presenting with this disease

  3. Clinical Features • Insidious in onset • Gradual development of forgetfulness  major symptom • Failure in cerebral function manifested disturbances in vocabulary and writing • Amnesia, aphasia, agnosia, and apraxia • Changes in locomotion • Lengthy pre-clinical period  7 years or more • Symptomatic course  5 years or more

  4. Korsakoff Amnesic State • Early stages of Alzheimer disease are usually dominated by a disproportionate failure of retentive memory, with integrity of other cognitive abilities • Short and long term memory fails • e.g. impairment of retentive memory to the point that a patient can recall nothing of what he has learned a minute or 2 previously

  5. Dysnomia • Forgetting of words esp. proper names • Progresses to a point where fluency is seriously impaired

  6. Visuospatial Disturbance • Derangement of parieto-occipital functions • “posterior cortical dementia” • Prosopagnosia, losing one’s way in familiar surrounding, difficulty, inability to interpret a road map, to distinguish right from left, or to park or garage a car, and difficulty in setting the table or dressing are all manifestations of a special ailureto orient the schema of one’s body with that of surrounding space. • Neglect of stimuli in one visual field • Gerstmann syndrome

  7. Paranoia and Personality Changes • Most prominent event • May appear before the more obvious memory or language defects announce themselves

  8. Vascular dementia • 2nd most common form of dementia after Alzheimer's disease • degenerative cerebrovascular disease that leads to a progressive decline in memory and cognitive functioning • occurs when the blood supply carrying oxygen and nutrients to the brain is interrupted by a blocked or diseased vascular system • higher in men than in women • incidence increases with age

  9. Different types of vascular dementia • Stroke-related dementia • Single-infarct dementia • Multi-infarct dementia • Small vessel disease-related dementia • known as sub-cortical vascular dementia • Binswanger's disease (severe form) • Vascular dementia and Alzheimer's disease (mixed dementia)

  10. Signs and Symptoms Behavioral signs/symptoms • Slurred speech • Language problems • Abnormal behavior • Wandering or getting lost in familiar surroundings • Laughing or crying inappropriately • Difficulty following instructions • Problems handling money Physical signs/symptoms • Memory problems; forgetfulness • Dizziness • Leg or arm weakness • Lack of concentration • Moving with rapid, shuffling steps • Loss of bladder or bowel control

  11. Risk factors • high blood pressure • diabetes • high cholesterol • family history of heart problems • disease in arteries elsewhere in the body • heart rhythm abnormalities • lifestyle factors (overweight/smoking)

  12. Treatment and Prevention • taking medication to treat any underlying conditions • control high blood pressure and heart disease • commitment to a healthier lifestyle • stopping smoking, taking regular exercise, healthy diet and drinking alcohol in moderation • receiving rehabilitative support • physiotherapy, occupational therapy and speech therapy

  13. Lewy Body Dementia • Characterized by visual hallucinations, parkinsonism, fluctuating alertness, falls and often REM sleep behavior disorders • Dementia can precede or follow the appearance of parkinsonism • Highly susceptible to metabolic perturbation; some may manifest first with delirium precipitated by infection or other systemic disturbance

  14. Lewy Body Dementia • Better memory than AD but more severe visuospatial deficits • Key pathologic feature: LEWY BODIES in the cortex, amygdala, cingulate cortex, and substantianigra.

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