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The Neuropsychiatry of Aging

The Neuropsychiatry of Aging. Clifford Singer, MD Medical Director of Geriatric Mental Health and Neuropsychiatry The Acadia Hospital and Eastern Maine Medical Center Bangor, Maine . Overview. Introduction Dementia/Depression/Delirium Clinical Assessment Treatment Summary. Introduction.

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The Neuropsychiatry of Aging

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  1. The Neuropsychiatry of Aging Clifford Singer, MD Medical Director of Geriatric Mental Health and Neuropsychiatry The Acadia Hospital and Eastern Maine Medical Center Bangor, Maine

  2. Overview • Introduction • Dementia/Depression/Delirium • Clinical Assessment • Treatment • Summary

  3. Introduction • Normal neurological and psychological aging: • Challenging to define • Increased variability in old age • Effect of “preclinical” disease hard to detect • Of neuropsychiatric variables, memory, mood and motor functions are the most sensitive to aging and pathology: “The 3 D’s”

  4. Clinical Syndromes in Old Age: The Four D’s • Dementia: Cognitive disorder • Depression: Mood disorder • Delirium: Attention/arousal disorder • Delusions: Disorder of perception and beliefs • All share a “Fifth D”: disability • And a “sixth D”: dyskinesia

  5. The Overlapping Syndromes Cognition Depression Attention Mood Delirium Delusions Dementia Perception Motor

  6. Dementia • Decline in cognitive function from a previous adult level • Recent memory impairment • Impaired executive function is the real disability • Many underlying causes; detection of dementia should prompt effort to diagnosis underlying cause

  7. Mood in Dementia • Changes in mood and behavior can be seen before changes in cognition are noticeable • Apathy (loss of: initiative, motivation, drive, emotional responsiveness, engagement) is disabling • Depression, irritability and anxiety are very common in dementia • Affect dysregulation can be severe in later stages leading to “catastrophic reactions”

  8. Major Depressive Disorder • Disorder of mood with cognitive and motor features • MDD increases with disability in old age • Mood is affected by other common conditions: 3 I’s: isolation, immobility, impairment • Brain diseases of aging increase prevalence rates: especially vascular and parkinsonian diseases

  9. Depression and Dementia • Complex relationship of cause and affect • Old concept of “pseudodementia” no longer valid • Depression “accelerates” brain aging: cortisol, decreased neurotrophic factors • MDD and AD co-existing bring on dementia sooner than either alone

  10. Delirium • Disorder of cortical arousal and confusion • Alert-delirious-stuporous-comatose • AKA: Transient confusional episode, encephalopathy, altered mental status • Hallmark: impaired sustained attention • Other features: disorientation, hallucinations, delusions, agitation, anxiety, fluctuating congition and awareness, sleep-wake cycle disturbances

  11. Causes of Delirium • Predisposing factors: Immature brain development or brain damage or dysfunction • Precipitating factors: infection, metabolic derangements, vascular events, toxic substances (including meds), seizures, stress, surgery (multifactorial) • Good prognosis for index episode, less favorable for long term

  12. Delusional Disorders • Late life psychosis may occur in context of mood disorder (MDD, Bipolar), dementia, delirium, long standing mental illness (schizophrenia) or late life onset (delusional disorder) • Psychosis without delusions: visual hallucinations (Charles Bonnet), musical hallucinations

  13. Key Elements of Clinical Assessment • History • Geriatric ROS and functional status • Exam • Labs • Imaging

  14. History • What has changed? • When did it change? • What did you notice first? • Gradual or progressive? • Personality change?

  15. Memory • The impaired ability to learn new information is the core of dementia • Affected by normal aging, beginning in early adulthood: annoying, not disabling • Aging affects episodic and working memory not implicit memory • Severe memory impairment without dementia is known as “MCI” or mild cognitive impairment

  16. Executive Functions • Reasoning, decision-making, judgment, impulse control, initiation, abstraction, planning, task execution • Served by the frontal cortex: not affected by normal aging • The real disability of dementia • Impaired by depression

  17. Attention • Essential for survival • Must be selectively focused or organism becomes overwhelmed • Brain stem, reticular activating system and frontal cortex all necessary • Diffuse processes affect system at all levels and produce delirium

  18. Motor Functions • Diseases that affect central motor functions usually cause cognitive and mood changes • Stroke, Parkinsonian diseases, ALS, Huntington’s • Dementia, depression and delirium also associated with motor changes

  19. Geriatric Review of Systems for Neuropsychiatry • MOMS: mobility, output, memory, sleep • AND: aches, neurological, depression • DADS: delusions, appetite, dermis, sensory

  20. Functional Status • ADLs • IADLs (instrumental or cognitive ADLs) • Descriptive instruments • Clinical Dementia Rating Scale • Morris JC, 1993, Neurology 43:2412-4 • Rate five domains (memory, orientation, problem solving, community affairs, home and hobbies, self-care) on 0-3 scale to score no dementia, questionable, mild, moderate, severe

  21. Cognitive Exam • Select instrument or assessment based on your objective: • Screening (high sensitivity, fast, easy) • Differential diagnosis (high selectivity) • Detecting change over time (high test-retest reliability)

  22. Executive Function • Key concept in assessment: the true disability of dementia • Refers to frontal lobe cognition: abstraction, reasoning, decision-making, impulse control, initiation, cognitive flexibility, attention and concentration, planning and sequencing in task execution, verbal skills

  23. Looking for AD • Abnormal tests of memory and orientation, verbal fluency, copy of geometric design, praxis in context of normal gait, balance, mood and affect • Screening: Mini-Cog, Mini-Cog + verbal fluency task • Global tests recommended: MMSE, MoCA (mocatest.org), SLUMS

  24. Quick Screen: Mini-CogBorson S et al. 2003 JAGS 51(10):1451-1454 • 3-word recall • Clock draw test • Sensitivity and specificity rivals MMSE • Validated cross cultures • Can be augmented with other quick tests of attention and verbal fluency to create an impromptu screening tool

  25. Common Global Tests • Mini-Mental State Exam • Modified MMSE (3MSE) • Montreal Cognitive Assessment • Public domain • Excellent website with instructions and validation data • Validated in numerous languages • More sensitive than MMSE • St. Louis University Mental Status

  26. www.mocatest.org

  27. Differential Diagnosis • Nature and severity of impairment give critical clues to diagnosis. • Sample broad spectrum of cognitive functions, but take a “deeper biopsy” where you think the lesion is based on history.

  28. Alzheimer’s Disease • Medial temporal/hippocampal phase: • AD begins with a long phase of recent memory impairment • Dementia phase: • As the disease spreads to frontal and parietal cotex, it becomes disabling with task, verbal, executive and perceptual dysfunction

  29. Vascular Dementia • Small vessel disease presents as a subcortical process with gradual erosion of executive function associated with parkinsonism • Large vessel disease highly variable, “step-wise” progression in cognition and neurological findings

  30. Dementia with Lewy Bodies • A diffuse cortical-subcortical process characterized by a progressive, chronic delirium with parkinsonism without tremor and REM Sleep Behavior Disorder • Less memory impairment than AD • Fluctuating alertness, attention, executive function

  31. Frontal Lobe Dementia • Diagnosis based on age, history of personality changes as much as cognitive changes. • Verbal fluency often impaired early on • Imaging (especially PET, SPECT) especially helpful

  32. Verbal Fluency • A sensitive measure of prefrontal cortex function • Impaired in many types of dementia as well as mental illness • Number of words generated in one minute in either letter or semantic categories (FAS or animals) • >15 is good performance, <10 is impaired

  33. Depression • Complex relationship to dementia as both a risk factor and cause • General memory impairment • General executive impairment • Highly variable and fluctuating • Not a “pseudo-dementia” • Depression with dementia has a poor prognosis

  34. Delirium • Primarily a disorder of cortical activation with fluctuating alertness, attention and concentration • Diffuse problems with orientation, memory and executive function • Often associated with ataxia, praxis and problems with gait and balance

  35. Attention and Concentration • Attention: • Digit Span (7 forward and 5 reverse) • Concentration: Sustained mental tasks • Reverse spelling • Reverse sequences (months) • Serial subtractions • Story recall

  36. Assessing Mood and Behavior • Instruments: • Geriatric Depression Scale • Cornell Scale for Depression in Dementia • Neuropsychiatric Inventory

  37. Lab Tests • CBC, complete metabolic profile • Thyroid function tests • UA, HIV?, RPR/FTA? • B12, folate, vitamin D • EEG? • Polysomnography?

  38. Imaging • Non-contrast CT in most • MRI in vascular dementia is considered or better documentation of AD is needed (hippocampal atrophy) • SPECT or PET when FTD is considered or better documentation of AD is needed

  39. Key Clinical Features

  40. Summary • Changes in mood, behavior, thinking and cognition are pathological in old age and require a differential diagnosis • Assessment skills should suit the occasion • Clinicians should think about specific functions and pathology in assessment

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