Dementia differentiating dementia from other diseases
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Overview
This topic will discuss the evaluation of patients with cognitive impairment and dementia. With an aging population and growing awareness of dementias, clinicians should be equipped to test for cognitive impairment and ask about functional decline to avoid failure to recognize cases of related dementias. Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is an intermediate clinical state between normal cognition and dementia is mostly because of reversible causes like depression.
Dementia
- Delirium is distinguished from dementia (chronic organic brain syndrome) which describes an "acquired" (non-congenital) and usually irreversible cognitive and psychosocial decline in function.
- Dementia usually results from an identifiable degenerative brain disease (for example Alzheimer disease or Huntington's disease). Dementia is usually not associated with a change in level of consciousness, and a diagnosis of dementia requires a chronic impairment.
- Sundowning: Typically observed in patients suffering from dementia. It's an impairment in behavioral patterns in the evening hours. Similar symptomology can be observed in the patients suffering from other ailments such as impaired circardial rhythm. New onset in change in behavioral patterns should always be assessed carefully and diagnosis of delirium should be considered.[1]
Attributes | Delirium | Alzheimer's disease | Depression | Psychotic Disorders |
---|---|---|---|---|
Onset | Sudden/acute/subacute | Gradual | Gradual | Acute or gradual[2] |
Progression | Shifts in severity, likely to resolve in days to weeks. | Worsens over period of time | Acute or chronic with acute exacerbation | Chronic with acute exacerbation |
Hallucinations | May be present, mostly visual | Mostly absent (exceptions: Lewi body dementia, etc.) | May be present if associated with psychotic features | Present |
Delusions[3] | Fleeting | Mostly not present | May be present | Present |
Psychomotar activity | Increased or decreased, may shift from increased to decreased states. | May or may not change | Change | Change |
Attention | Poor attention span and impaired short term memory. | Progressive worsening short term memory. Attention span is likely to be affected in severe cases | May be altered | May be altered |
Consciousness | Altered, rapidly shifts | Mostly intact until severe stages | Normal | Normal |
Attention | Altered, rapidly shifts | Mostly intact until severe stages | May be altered | May be altered |
Orientation | Altered, rapidly shifts | Mostly intact until severe stages | Not altered | Not altered |
Speech | Not coherent | Errors | Slow | Normal or pressured |
Thought | Disorganized | Impoverished | Normal | Disorganized |
Perceptions | Altered, rapidly shifts | Mostly intact until severe stages | Normal | May be altered |
EEG | Moderate to severe background slowing | Normal or mild diffuse slowing | Normal | Normal |
Reversibility | Mostly | Very rarely | Yes | Rarely |
References
- ↑ "ABC of psychological medicine: Delirium".
- ↑ Carr DB, Gray S, Baty J, Morris JC (December 2000). "The value of informant versus individual's complaints of memory impairment in early dementia". Neurology. 55 (11): 1724–6. doi:10.1212/wnl.55.11.1724. PMID 11113230.
- ↑ Wang PN, Wang SJ, Fuh JL, Teng EL, Liu CY, Lin CH, Shyu HY, Lu SR, Chen CC, Liu HC (March 2000). "Subjective memory complaint in relation to cognitive performance and depression: a longitudinal study of a rural Chinese population". J Am Geriatr Soc. 48 (3): 295–9. doi:10.1111/j.1532-5415.2000.tb02649.x. PMID 10733056.
- ↑ "Delirium in elderly adults: diagnosis, prevention and treatment".