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“3 D’s” of Geriatrics Dementia, Delirium, and Depression These common disorders can look alike. GAI often helps uncover or differentiate them. All are.

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Presentation on theme: "“3 D’s” of Geriatrics Dementia, Delirium, and Depression These common disorders can look alike. GAI often helps uncover or differentiate them. All are."— Presentation transcript:

1 “3 D’s” of Geriatrics Dementia, Delirium, and Depression These common disorders can look alike. GAI often helps uncover or differentiate them. All are associated with elder mistreatment.

2 Scope of the Issues Dementia Population trends. 8% of patients over 65 years old have dementia. Incidence doubles every 5 years: 2% at 65 and 32% at 85 years. 3.5 million cases in 1999 will be 14 million in 40 years. Cost of Alzheimer’s Disease alone is $90−100 billion per year.

3 Dementia Dementia is a progressive decline in cognitive and functional abilities with associated psychiatric disturbances. Normal aging leads to a slowing of performance but not decreased cognition.

4 Differential Diagnosis: General Dementia Depression Delirium

5 Differential Diagnosis: Specific Alzheimer’s Diffuse Lewy Body Vascular Parkinson’s Ethanol abuse Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus Huntington’s Frontal Lobe Shy Drager/ Progressive Supranuclear Palsy CJ

6 Delirium 1. Acute change in mental status and 2. Inattention With either: 3. Disorganized thinking or 4. Altered level of consciousness

7 Delirium It is a medical emergency. 15−20% of medical patients are delirious upon admission. 25−60% of patients over 65 years old develop delirium after admission. 32−67% of physicians fail to recognize the disease.

8 Differential Diagnosis Always consider dementia and depression as competing diagnoses. Other: post-ictal state, psychiatric disorders, nonconvulsive epilepsy. Three types of delirium Organic (medical) Post-operative Terminal restlessness The initial evaluation is primarily an acute workup in search of the underlying cause(s). Use of the Confusion Assessment Method (CAM) is essential in identifying delirium.

9 Dementia vs. Delirium Chronic Irreversible Long course Day to day Vague onset Acute Reversible Short course Hour to hour Precise onset

10 Dementia and Depression Pseudo-dementia: patients with complete recovery of high intellectual functioning will develop irreversible dementia at 20% per year. Late-onset depression has a higher prevalence of dementing disorders. Demented elderly develop depression at a higher rate.

11 Depression Prevalence in older adults: Community 1% (27%)* Inpatients11%(40%)* Nursing home 10−25% (45%)* * Inflated numbers due to inclusion of patients with less severe symptoms.

12 Depression Duration 31−50 years 9−18 months >50 years3−5 years Recurrence 50% after first episode 70% after second episode 90% after third episode Depression Treatable in 75% of cases. Untreated cases associated with 15% mortality. Suicide rate in elderly is double the rate for all other age groups. Workup is identical for that of dementia. Dementia and depression often coexist.


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