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Chapter 15 Cognitive Disorders

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Title: Chapter 15 Cognitive Disorders


1
Chapter 15Cognitive Disorders
0
2
Nature of Cognitive Disorders An Overview
0
  • Perspectives on Cognitive Disorders
  • Affect cognitive processes such as learning,
    memory, and consciousness
  • Most develop later in life
  • Three Classes of Cognitive Disorders
  • Delirium Often temporary confusion and
    disorientation
  • Dementia Degenerative condition marked by broad
    cognitive deterioration
  • Amnestic disorders Memory dysfunctions caused
    by disease, drugs, or toxins
  • Shifting DSM Perspectives
  • From organic mental disorders to cognitive
    disorders
  • Broad impairments in memory, attention,
    perception, and thinking
  • Profound changes in behavior and personality

3
Delirium An Overview
0
  • Nature of Delirium
  • Central features Impaired consciousness and
    cognition
  • Impairments develop rapidly over several hours or
    days
  • Examples include confusion, disorientation,
    attention, memory, and language deficits
  • Facts and Statistics
  • Affects 10 to 30 of persons in acute care
    facilities
  • Most prevalent in older adults, AIDS patients,
    and medical patients
  • Full recovery often occurs within several weeks

4
Medical Conditions Related to Delirium
0
  • Medical Conditions
  • Drug intoxication, poisons, withdrawal from drugs
  • Infections, head injury, and several forms of
    brain trauma
  • Sleep deprivation, immobility, and excessive
    stress
  • DSM-IV and DSM-IV Subtypes of Delirium
  • Delirium due to a general medical condition
  • Substance-induced delirium
  • Delirium due to multiple etiologies
  • Delirium not otherwise specified

5
Treatment and Prevention of Delirium
0
  • Treatment
  • Attention to precipitating medical problems
  • Psychosocial interventions include reassurance,
    coping strategies
  • Prevention
  • Address proper medical care for illnesses
  • Address proper use and adherence to therapeutic
    drugs

6
Dementia An Overview
0
  • Nature of Dementia
  • Gradual deterioration of brain functioning
  • Affects judgment, memory, language, and advanced
    cognitive processes
  • Dementia has many causes and may be reversible or
    irreversible
  • Progression of Dementia Initial Stages
  • Memory impairment, visuospatial skills deficits
  • Agnosia Inability to recognize and name objects
    (most common symptom)
  • Facial agnosia Inability to recognize familiar
    faces
  • Other symptoms Delusions, depression,
    agitation, aggression, and apathy

7
Dementia An Overview (cont.)
0
  • Progression of Dementia Later Stages
  • Cognitive functioning continues to deteriorate
  • Person requires almost total support to carry out
    day-to-day activities
  • Death results from inactivity combined with onset
    of other illnesses

8
Dementia Facts and Statistics
0
  • Onset and Prevalence
  • Can occur at any age, but most common in the
    elderly
  • Affects 1 of those between 65-74 years of age
  • Affects over 10 of persons 85 years and older
  • 47 of adults over the age of 85 have dementia of
    the Alzheimers type
  • Incidence of Dementia
  • Affects 2.3 of those 75-79 years of age and 8.5
    of persons 85 and older
  • Rates of new cases appear to double with every 5
    years of age
  • Gender and Sociocultural Factors
  • Dementia occurs equally in men and women
  • Dementia occurs equally across educational level
    and social class

9
DSM-IV and DSM-IV-TR Classes of Dementia
0
  • Dementia of the Alzheimers type
  • Vascular Dementia
  • Dementia Due to Other General Medical Conditions
  • Substance-Induced Persisting Dementia
  • Dementia Due to Multiple Etiologies
  • Dementia Not Otherwise Specified

10
Dementia of the Alzheimers Type An Overview
0
  • DSM-IV-TR Criteria and Clinical Features
  • Multiple cognitive deficits that develop
    gradually and steadily
  • Predominant impairment in memory, orientation,
    judgment, and reasoning
  • Can include agitation, confusion, depression,
    anxiety, or combativeness
  • Symptoms are usually more pronounced at the end
    of the day

11
Dementia of the Alzheimers Type An Overview
(cont.)
0
  • Range of Cognitive Deficits
  • Aphasia Difficulty with language
  • Apraxia Impaired motor functioning
  • Agnosia Failure to recognize objects
  • Difficulties with planning, organizing,
    sequencing, or abstracting information
  • Impairments have a marked negative impact on
    social and occupational functioning
  • An Autopsy Is Required for a Definitive Diagnosis

12
Alzheimers Disease Some Facts and Statistics
0
  • Nature and Progression of the Disease
  • Deterioration is slow during the early and later
    stages, but rapid during middle stages
  • Average survival time is about 8 years
  • Onset usually occurs in the 60s or 70s, but may
    occur earlier
  • Prevalence of Alzheimers Disease
  • Affects about 4 million Americans and many more
    worldwide
  • Prevalence is greater in poorly educated persons
    and women
  • Prevalence rates are low in some ethnic groups
    (e.g., Japanese, Nigerian, Amish)

13
Vascular Dementia An Overview
0
  • Nature of Vascular Dementia
  • Progressive brain disorder caused by blockage or
    damage to blood vessels
  • Second leading cause of dementia next to
    Alzheimers
  • Onset is often sudden (e.g., stroke)
  • Patterns of impairment are variable, and most
    require formal care in later stages
  • DSM-IV and DSM-IV Criteria and Incidence
  • Cognitive disturbances that are identical to
    dementia
  • Unlike Alzheimers, obvious neurological signs of
    brain tissue damage occur
  • Incidence is believed to be about 4.7 of men and
    3.8 of women

14
Dementia Related to HumanImmunodeficiency
Virus-Type 1 (HIV-1)
0
  • Overview and Clinical Features
  • HIV causes neurological impairments and dementia
  • Cognitive slowness, impaired attention, and
    forgetfulness, clumsiness
  • Repetitive movements (e.g., tremors/leg
    weakness), apathy, and social withdrawal
  • Progression of HIV-Related Cognitive Impairments
  • Tend to occur during the later stages of HIV
    infection
  • Impairments are observed in 29 to 87 of people
    with AIDS
  • Sub-cortical dementia Refers to deficits that
    affect inner brain regions
  • Aphasia is uncommon in sub-cortical dementia, but
    anxiety and depression occur

15
Other Causes of DementiaHead Trauma and
Parkinsons Disease
0
  • Head Trauma
  • Accidents are leading causes of such cognitive
    impairments
  • Memory loss is the most common symptom
  • Parkinsons Disease
  • Degenerative brain disorder
  • Affects about 1 out of 1,000 people worldwide
  • Motor problems are characteristic of this
    disorder
  • Damage to dopamine pathways is believed to cause
    motor problems
  • Pattern of impairments are similar to
    sub-cortical dementia

16
Other Causes of DementiaHuntingtons and Picks
Disease
0
  • Huntingtons Disease
  • Genetic autosomal dominant disorder (i.e.,
    chromosome 4)
  • Manifests initially as chorea, usually later in
    life (around 40s or 50s)
  • About 20 to 80 of persons go on to display
    dementia of the sub-cortical pattern
  • Picks Disease
  • Rare neurological condition that produces a
    cortical dementia like Alzheimers
  • Also occurs later in life (around 40s or 50s)
  • Little is known about what causes this disease

17
Other Dementias Creutzfeldt-Jakob Diseaseand
Substance-Induced Dementia
0
  • Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease
  • Affects 1 out of 1,000,000 persons
  • Linked to mad cow disease
  • Substance-Induced Persisting Dementia
  • Results from drug use in combination with poor
    diet
  • Examples include alcohol, inhalants, sedative,
    hypnotic, and anxiolytic drugs
  • Resulting brain damage may be permanent
  • Dementia is similar to that of Alzheimers
  • Deficits may include aphasia, apraxia, agnosia,
    or disturbed executive functioning

18
Causes of Dementia The Example of Alzheimers
Disease
0
  • Early and Largely Unsupported Views
  • Implicated aluminum and smoking
  • Current Neurobiological Findings
  • Neurofibrillary tangles Occur in all brains of
    Alzheimers patients
  • Amyloid plaques Accumulate excessively in
    brains of Alzheimers patients
  • The role of amyloid proteins (apoE-2, apoE-3, and
  • apoE-4)
  • Brains of Alzheimers patients tend to atrophy

19
Causes of Dementia The Example ofAlzheimers
Disease (cont.)
0
  • Current Neurobiological Findings
  • Multiple genes are involved in Alzheimers
    disease (chromosomes 21, 19, 14, 12, 1)
  • Chromosome 14 Associated with early
  • onset Alzheimers
  • Chromosome 19 Associated with a late
  • onset Alzheimers

20
The Contributions of Psychosocial Factors in
Dementia
0
  • Psychosocial Factors
  • Do not cause dementia directly, but may influence
    onset and course
  • Lifestyle factors Drug use, diet, exercise,
    stress
  • Cultural factors Risk for certain diseases and
    accidents vary by ethnicity and class
  • Psychosocial factors Educational attainment,
    coping skills, social support

21
Medical and Psychosocial Treatment of Dementia
0
  • Medical Treatment Best if Enacted Early
  • Few medical treatments exist for most types of
    dementia
  • Most medical treatments attempt to slow
    progression of deterioration
  • Examples include glial cell-derived neurotrophic
    factor, Cognex, vitamin E, aspirin
  • Medical treatments do not stop progression of
    dementia
  • Psychosocial Treatments
  • Focus on enhancing the lives of dementia patients
    and their families/caregivers
  • Teach adaptive skills
  • Use memory enhancement prosthetic devices (e.g.,
    memory wallet)
  • Main emphasis of psychosocial interventions
    appears to be on the caregivers

22
Prevention of Dementia
0
  • Reducing Risk of Dementia in Older Adults Via
  • Estrogen-replacement therapy Reduces risk of
    Alzheimers dementia in women
  • Proper treatment of cardiovascular diseases
  • Use of anti-inflammatory medications
  • Other Targets of Prevention Efforts
  • Increasing safety behaviors to reduce head trauma
  • Reducing exposure to neurotoxins and use of drugs

23
Mike
24
Amnestic Disorder An Overview
0
  • Nature of Amnestic Disorder
  • Circumscribed loss of memory
  • Inability to transfer information into long-term
    memory
  • Often results from medical conditions, head
    trauma, or long-term drug use
  • DSM-IV and DSM-IV-TR Criteria for Amnestic
    Disorder
  • Cover the inability to learn new information
  • Inability to recall previously learned
    information
  • Memory disturbance causes significant impairment
    in functioning

25
Amnestic Disorder An Overview (cont.)
0
  • The Example of Wernicke-Korsakoff Syndrome
  • Caused by thalamic damage resulting from stroke
    or chronic heavy alcohol use
  • Attempt to restore thiamine deficiency in the
    case of chronic alcohol abuse
  • Research on Amnestic Disorders Is Scant

26
Summary of Cognitive Disorders
0
  • Cognitive Disorders Span a Range of Deficits
  • Attention, memory, language, and motor behavior
  • Causes include medical conditions, drug use, or
    environmental factors
  • Most Cognitive Disorders Result in Progressive
    Deterioration of Functioning
  • Few Treatments Exist to Reverse Pattern of Damage
    and Resulting Deficits
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