Behavioral and psychotic symptoms of dementia
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]
Synonyms and keywords: BPSD
Overriew
BPSD is defined as "symptoms of disturbed perception, thought content, mood or behavior that frequently occur in patients with dementia".[1]
Pathophysiology
The cause of BPSD is not clear. It has been hypothesized to be due to abnormalities in the way information is processed, integrated, and retrieved.[2]
Causes
Natural History, Complications and Prognosis
Natural History
The symptoms may progress or certain symptoms occur during certain phases of the illness.
Complications
- Premature institutionalization
- Increased cost
- Reduced quality of life for both caregiver and patient
- Caregive stress
- Nursing staff stress
Diagnosis
Symptoms
In the original description of Alzheimer's disease by Alois Alzheimer in 1906, the following symptos figured prominently:
- Aggression and hostility in 20% of patients
- Agitation
- Cursing
- Delusions of sexual abuse in 20%-73% of patients
- Depressive mood
- Hallucinations in 15% to 49% of patients
- Hoarding
- Misidentifications in 23% to 50% of patients
- Paranoia
- Screaming
- Sexual disinhibition
- Shadowing
- Wandering
Treatment
Guidelines
The Alzheimer's Association recommends training and education for both professional and family caregivers on psychosocial interventions that might include [3]:
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