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Health

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... of two abnormal structures beta amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles. ... Amyloid proteins. senile plaques. Neurofibrillary tangles of tau protein ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Health


1
Health IllnessAssessment of Dementia
  • Jenny Wilson
  • Wilsonj1_at_hope.ac.uk

2
Dementia What is it?
  • Dementia is a generic label used to describe a
    progressive decline of cognitive function,
    severe enough to impair the daily functioning of
    an individual, leading to long term care.
  • Many diseases can result in dementia, the most
    common one being Alzheimers disease

3
DSM IV Criteria for Dementia
  • A person suffers from dementia when multiple
    cognitive deficits develop manifested by
  • 1.  Memory impairment (inability to learn new
    information or recall previously learned
    information)
  • 2. Cognitive disturbances of One (or more) of the
    following
  • (a) aphasia (b) apraxia (c)agnosia
    (d) disturbance in executive function .
  • 3.   Cognitive deficits in 1 and 2 cause
    significant impairment in social and occupational
    functioning and represent decline from previous
    level of functioning.
  • 4. The cognitive deficits in 1 and 2 are not due
    to any of the following
  • Other central nervous conditions that cause
    progressive deficits in memory and cognition.
  • Systemic conditions that are known to cause
    dementia.
  • Substance- induced conditions.

4
Dementia Prevalence Rates
  • Dementia currently affects over 750,000 people in
    the UK
  • 18,500 people with dementia are aged under 65
    years
  • Dementia affects one person in 20 aged over 65
    years and
  • one person in five over 80 years of age

5
Alzheimers Disease
  • Single most common cause of dementia
  • Can occur from age of 45
  • typically an age-associated disease,
  • Prevalence up to the age of 65 years, only 1
    person in 1000 is affected.
  • This figure increases sharply to 1 in 20 over the
    age of 65.
  • 1 in 5 over the age of 80 years

6
On a Peculiar Disease of the Cerebral Cortex. A.
Alzheimer (1907)
  • A woman, 51 years old, showed jealousy towards
    her husband as the first noticeable sign of the
    disease.  Soon increasing loss of memory could be
    noticed.  She couldnt find her way around her
    own apartment.  She carried objects back and
    forth and hid them. 
  • At times she would think that someone wanted to
    kill her.She was totally disoriented to time and
    place At times she greeted the doctor like a
    visitor.Periodically, she was delirious, dragged
    her bedding around, called  her husband and
    daughter, and had auditory hallucinations. Frequen
    tly, she shrieked for many hours
  • Her ability to remember was severely disturbed. 
    If one pointed to objects, she named most of them
    correctly, but immediately afterwards she would
    forget everything again When talking she
    frequently used perplexing phrases and some
    paraphrasic expressions She seemed no longer to
    understand the use of some objects The
    generalized dementia progressed After 4 1/2
    years of the disease, death occurred.

7
Symptoms
  • People with Alzheimers disease suffer from
  • impaired memory orientation,
  • limitations of concentration, planning and
    judgement
  • personality changes
  • perceptual, speech and walking disorders
  • And in the final stage, various other body
    functions such as swallowing and the excretion
    process are affected.

8
Early indications of dementia
  • Forgetfulness in daily life
  • Most people sometimes forget names or
    appointments or forget where they put keys.
  • In dementia this happens frequently and
    inexplicable states of confusion also occur,

9
Early indications of dementia
  • Difficulties with familiar activities
  • People who are very busy are sometimes
    absent-minded and for example forget the pie in
    the oven.
  • People with dementia not only forget the pie in
    the oven but also that they have cooked at all.

10
Early indications of dementia
  • Language problems
  • We all sometimes experience difficulties in
    finding the right words.
  • Dementia sufferers often cannot remember simple
    words and instead they use inappropriate fillers
    (paraphrasic expressions)which makes it difficult
    to understand the sentences

11
Early indications of dementia
  • Problems with spatial and temporal orientation
    Dementia sufferers frequently do not know what
    day of the week it is.
  • They get easily lost, even in their own street
    they may no longer know where they are, how they
    got there and how to get home again.

12
Early indications of dementia
  • Impaired capacity of judgement
  • Dementia sufferers have difficulty making
    rational and appropriate judgements.
  • For example, they wear a bathrobe while shopping
    or several blouses on top of each other on a hot
    summer day.

13
Early indications of dementia
  • Problems with abstract thinking For many
    people running a bank account is a challenge.
    Dementia patients can often neither recognise
    numbers nor carry out simple calculations.

14
Early indications of dementia
  • Mood swings and behavioural changes People with
    dementia may have very sudden mood swings, often
    without discernible cause.
  • Personality changes People affected by
    dementia may experience a very pronounced
    personality change suddenly or over a longer
    period of time. Somebody who is generally
    friendly, for example, becomes unexpectedly
    angry, jealous or timid.

15
Stages of Alzheimers disease
  • Alzheimer's disease can take very different
    courses.
  • It is a slowly unfolding, progressive disease
    which is accompanied over time by changes in the
    appearance of the patient.
  • The disease is typically divided into three
    stages. In medical terms, Alzheimer's disease is
    divided into
  • Mild, Moderate and Severe OR early-stage,
    mid-stage and late-stage Alzheimer.
  • The individual course of the disease is, however,
    very variable.

16
Three stages of Alzheimers
  • Mild stage
  • Typically characterised by impairments of mental
    abilities as well as mood swings.
  • Moderate stage
  • Confusion Behavioural disturbances usually
    increasingly develop,
  • Advanced stage
  • Totally dependent state. physical problems are
    dominant

17
Alzheimer brain Gross anatomy
  • Alzheimer's disease attacks nerve cells in
    several regions of the brain 
  • A) Cerebral Cortex Involved in conscious
    thought and language.
  • B) Basal forebrain Has large numbers of neurons
    containing acetylcholine, a chemical important in
    memory and learning.
  • C) Hippocampus Essential to memory storage.

18
A
c
B
Image courtesy Alzheimer's Disease Education and
Referral Center,
19
Alzheimers disease pathology
  • Alzheimer's disease disrupts each of the three
    processes that keep neurons healthy
  • communication, metabolism, and repair.
  • This disruption causes certain nerve cells in the
    brain to stop working, lose connections with
    other nerve cells, and finally, die.
  • The destruction and death of nerve cells causes
    the memory failure, personality changes, problems
    in carrying out daily activities.

20
Tangles Plaques
  • The brains of AD patients have an abundance of
    two abnormal structures beta amyloid plaques
    and neurofibrillary tangles.
  • Plaques are dense, deposits of protein and
    cellular material outside and around the neurons.
  • Tangles are twisted fibres that build up inside
    the nerve cell.

21
(No Transcript)
22
Healthy neurons are marked by red arrows tangles
and plaques by the blue arrows.Courtesy Toshi
Kinoshita, Department of Pathology, University of
Wisconsin Medical School
23
Alzheimers Disease Pathology Summary
  • Acetylcholine loss
  • hippocampus
  • Amyloid proteins
  • senile plaques
  • Neurofibrillary tangles of tau protein
  • These represent death of neurons
  • Brain shrinks

24
Risk Factors for Alzheimers
  • AGE
  • Chances of getting AD increase with age. 1 in 50
    (2) between 65 70. This raises to 1 in 5 (20)
    over 80 years.
  • Gender
  • Women more likely to develop AD. (possibly due to
    lack of oestrogen after menopause)
  • Genetics
  • ApoE predisposition. Link with Downs Syndrome
  • Education
  • Lower levels of Eduction associated with
    increased risk
  • Head Injury inconclusive (males only)
  • Environment Aluminium, not definite link
    established

25
Current Diagnostic Methods
  • The only definite way to diagnose AD is to find
    out whether there are plaques and tangles in
    brain tissue.
  • To look at brain tissue, doctors must wait until
    they do an autopsy, which is an examination of
    the body done after a person dies.
  • During life, doctors make a diagnosis of
    "possible" or "probable" AD.
  • At specialized centers, doctors can diagnose AD
    correctly up to 90 percent of the time. Doctors
    use several tools to diagnose "probable" AD

26
Current Diagnostic Methods
  • Medical tests
  • E.g. tests of blood, urine, or spinal fluid
    Allows other possible diseases (that may be
    causing the symptoms) to be excluded.

27
Current Diagnostic Methods
  • Neuroimaging
  • Brain scans can also be used to gain information
    about blood flow and metabolic activity in
    various parts of the brain.

PET
28
Clinical Assessment
  • A complete medical history includes information
    about the person's general health, past medical
    problems, and any difficulties the person has
    carrying out daily activities.
  • Neuropsychological tests measure memory, problem
    solving, attention, counting, and language. For
    example MMSE, RBMT

29
Major disorders mistaken for Alzheimers Disease
  • Depression
  • Subcortical dementia
  • Non-AD dementia syndromes

30
In class Exercise The MMSE
  • Take some time familiarising yourself with the
    questions.
  • One person is the examiner the other is the
    client
  • The aim is to give you the opportunity to
    experience using this screening tool
  • Clients you may or may not be presenting with
    dementia.
  • Examiner its your job to decide if performance
    is considered cognitively impaired possibly due
    to dementia.
  • NB in the real world not just rely on the
    MMSE.
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