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CAROLINE HARADA, M.D. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF MEDICINE UAB DIVISION OF GERONTOLOGY, GERIATRICS, AND PALLIATIVE CARE NOVEMBER 2013 Dementia.

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Presentation on theme: "CAROLINE HARADA, M.D. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF MEDICINE UAB DIVISION OF GERONTOLOGY, GERIATRICS, AND PALLIATIVE CARE NOVEMBER 2013 Dementia."— Presentation transcript:

1 CAROLINE HARADA, M.D. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF MEDICINE UAB DIVISION OF GERONTOLOGY, GERIATRICS, AND PALLIATIVE CARE NOVEMBER 2013 Dementia

2 Dementia Defined Decline in cognitive function from baseline

3 Epidemiology Dementia in the US population  Over 65: 5-10%  Over 85: 30-50% Kennedy, GJ. Geriatric Medicine, 4 th Ed. Cassel et al, Eds. 2003. p.1079; Gauthier S et al. Lancet 2006. 376: 1262-1270.

4 DSM-5: Major Neurocognitive Disorder DSM-5: Major Neurocognitive Disorder Decline from prior level of performance in at least 1 cognitive domain: 1. Complex attention 2. Executive function 3. Learning and memory 4. Language 5. Perceptual-motor 6. Social cognition Based on history and quantified clinical assessment Interfering with independence in everyday activities Not exclusively with delirium, psychiatric disorders Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5 th Ed, 2013

5 Dementia types Alzheimer Disease Mixed Vascular DLB Other 60% 15-20% 5-10% 5%

6 Alzheimer Disease New diagnostic criteria published in 2011 New diagnostic criteria published in 2011  Clinical criteria  Insidious onset of months to years  Progression of cognitive decline  Amnestic or nonamnestic symptoms  Differential diagnosis of Alzheimer dementia  Biomarkers  Accumulation of amyloid beta  Neuronal injury

7 Vascular Dementia Due to large or small vessel disease Stepwise progression of symptoms Executive function and processing speed can decline first, followed by memory, language, etc.

8 Dementia with Lewy Bodies Characteristics  Prominent visual hallucinations  Parkinsonism (gait, balance, rigidity, bradykinesia- rest tremor less common)  Falls or gait difficulties  Fluctuations in cognition  Sensitivity to antipsychotics (extrapyramidal side effects) Also  REM sleep behavior disorder  Decreased sympathetic function Knopman DS. Mayo Clin Proc, 2006; Blass DM, Rabins PV. Annals Int Med, 2008

9 Clinical Evaluation History Physical Examination  Vascular disease  Neurological exam Laboratories  B12, TSH, RPR, HIV, Vit D Imaging  Brain CT or MRI Neuropsychological testing

10 Dementia Drugs

11 Dementia Drugs Card Sort

12 Acetylcholinesterase Inhibitors Donepezil (Aricept) Galantamine (Razadyne) Rivastigmine (Exelon)

13 Efficacy Rogers: Neurology, 1998.136-145

14 Trinh NH et al. JAMA. 2003 Jan 8;289(2):210- 6.

15 Statistically significant? Yes. Clinically significant? Maybe? Adverse effects: nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, dizziness, tremor, and bradycardia Efficacy: Cholinesterase Inhibitors Raina, P et al. Ann Intern Med. 2008

16 NMDA antagonist: Memantine (Namenda) Mechanism of action: inhibition of glutamate Randomized, placebo-controlled trials show similarly small (but statistically significant) benefits Reisberg B et al. NEJM 2003; Raina, P et al. Ann Intern Med. 2008

17 NMDA antagonist Memantine (Namenda) Reisberg B et al. NEJM 2003

18 FDA-approved only for moderate to severe dementia Adverse effects: minimal Benefit to combination therapy with cholinesterase inhibitors: unclear Howard R et al, N Engl J Med. 2012 Mar 8; 366(10):893-903

19 Drug candidates that to date have no proven efficacy Anti-inflammatories Statins Estrogen Antioxidants Gingko biloba Fish oil, omega-3 fatty acids Vitamin E Lowering homocysteine Alcohol, especially wine Huperzine Curcumin Nicotine Insulin & insulin sensitizers, ketones

20 Dementia and End of Life Issues


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