1 / 18

Parkinsonism and dementia

Parkinsonism and dementia. Parkinsonism. “Parkinson’s Disease” Idiopathic and common. Diverse causes of parkinsonism Drug-induced parkinsonism. Certain toxins Certain complex degenerative diseases Wilson’s disease. Parkinson’s Disease. Parkinson’s disease: pathology.

caitir
Download Presentation

Parkinsonism and dementia

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Parkinsonism and dementia

  2. Parkinsonism • “Parkinson’s Disease” • Idiopathic and common. • Diverse causes of parkinsonism • Drug-induced parkinsonism. • Certain toxins • Certain complex degenerative diseases • Wilson’s disease

  3. Parkinson’s Disease

  4. Parkinson’s disease: pathology • Cell degeneration in the substantia nigra; Lewy bodies. • Loss of dopamine. • Unopposed actions of acetylcholine cause much of the rigidity.

  5. Cross section of the mid-brain Aqueduct Pyramidal tract Substantia nigra

  6. Symptoms and signs • Tremor: coarse ‘pill rolling’. Worse with emotion. May disappear during sleep. Disappears during movement. • Rigidity: ‘lead pipe’ or ‘cogwheel’. • Akinesia: difficulty initiating movement. • Postural change and festinating gait. • Speech: monotonous.

  7. Natural history • Progression at varying rates in different patients. • Usual course ~ 10 to 15 years. • Death from pneumonia.

  8. Differential diagnosis. • There are no laboratory or imaging tests that help. The diagnosis is entirely clinical. • The physician needs to be vigilant for parkinsonism as a part of more complex degenerative diseases.

  9. Aims of treatment • Prolong life • No drug has yet been shown to affect mortality. • Restore function for as long as possible • Provide community support • Safety at home • Social work • Physiotherapy

  10. Parkinsonian syndromes

  11. Drug induced parkinsonism • Drugs for schizophrenia are dopamine antagonists. • If given chronically they predictably cause parkinsonian adverse effects. • Critically: one cannot manage such patients with dopamine agonists. Instead we use anticholinergic drugs.

  12. Toxins • MPTP is a minor contaminant of synthetic opiates. • It is removed from pharmaceutical products. • But may sill contaminate illicit drug. • Very potent and often irreversible damage causing parkinsonism

  13. Parkinsonism as part of a ‘bigger’ syndrome • Rare degenerative CNS syndromes: e.g. progressive supranuclear palsy • Parkinsonism • Dementia • Ophthalmoplegia • Wilson’s disease • Inherited abnormality of copper m’lism • Parkinsonism and liver disease

  14. Dementia

  15. Definitions • ‘Delirium’: acute confusional state • Usually not the result of brain pathology, but of diverse systemic problems. • ‘Dementia’: brain disease leading to disturbed higher cortical function. Usually progressive and leading to gross disability. • Memory loss • Disorientation • Disordered thinking

  16. Alzheimer’s disease • Common (especially in elderly) • Unknown aetiology. • Insidious onset, slow development. • May be a family history. • Patients with Down’s syndrome at particular risk.

  17. Vascular dementia • Case definitions rely on history of previous stroke or TIA. • Imaging may help distinguish from Alzheimer’s.

  18. Diagnosis and management • Alert comes from family. • May present ‘cold’: referral to neurologist or psychologist. • Often presents ‘hot’: A&E failure to cope. • Imaging shows cortical atrophy. • Important to exclude depression

More Related