| Literature DB >> 26838803 |
Peter K Panegyres1, Renee Berry2, Jennifer Burchell3.
Abstract
As the population of the world increases, there will be larger numbers of people with dementia and an emerging need for prompt diagnosis and treatment. Early dementia screening is the process by which a patient who might be in the prodromal phases of a dementing illness is determined as having, or not having, the hallmarks of a neurodegenerative condition. The concepts of mild cognitive impairment, or mild neurocognitive disorder, are useful in analyzing the patient in the prodromal phase of a dementing disease; however, the transformation to dementia may be as low as 10% per annum. The search for early dementia requires a comprehensive clinical evaluation, cognitive assessment, determination of functional status, corroborative history and imaging (including MRI, FDG-PET and maybe amyloid PET), cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) examination assaying Aβ1-42, T-τ and P-τ might also be helpful. Primary care physicians are fundamental in the screening process and are vital in initiating specialist investigation and treatment. Early dementia screening is especially important in an age where there is a search for disease modifying therapies, where there is mounting evidence that treatment, if given early, might influence the natural history-hence the need for cost-effective screening measures for early dementia.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Solanezumab; amnestic mild cognitive impairment; clinical dementia rating scale; cognitive testing; global deterioration scale; mild cognitive impairment; mild neurocognitive disorder; non-amnestic mild cognitive impairment; treatments
Year: 2016 PMID: 26838803 PMCID: PMC4808821 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics6010006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
Diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and mild dementia 1 [4].
| Criteria | MCI | Mild AD |
|---|---|---|
| Evidence of performance | Objective evidence of poorer performance in one or more cognitive domains greater than expected for the patients age and educational background | Objective evidence of poorer performance in more than one cognitive domain such as memory, language, visuospatial or executive function |
| Interference with daily activities | Limited interference with daily activity; however, complex functional tasks may be completed less efficiently, e.g., preparing meals, shopping alone for clothes and groceries, planning a day’s activity, remembering appointments or paying bills | Significant interference in being able to function effectively at work or during usual activity; however, still able to carry out less complex activity, e.g., ADLs—bathing, dressing and grooming and IADLs—completing chores or attending social functions |
1 Concern about change in cognition, as compared with previous level based on information from the patient, clinician or corroborative informant. ADLs = Activities of Daily Living; IADLs = Instrumental Activities of Daily Living.
Figure 1Classification of mild cognitive impairment subtypes with presumed etiology. (A) Amnestic mild cognitive impairment; (B) non-amnestic mild cognitive impairment.
Clinical differentiation of the common dementias. Note: AD: Alzheimer’s disease; VD: vascular dementia; LBD: Lewy body dementia; FTD: fronto-temporal dementia; PSP: progressive supranuclear palsy; CBD: corticobasal degeneration.
| Disease | Initial Symptoms | Cognitive Impairment | Mental State Examination | Neurological Examination | Imaging Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Episodic memory loss | Predominance of memory loss with later involvement of all cognitive domains | Initially normal | Initially normal | Entorhinal, cortex and hippocampal atrophy | |
| Sudden onset with stepwise deterioration, falls, apathy, focal weakness | Frontal and executive function, generalized slowing, memory may be spared | Apathy, Delusions, Anxiety | Weakness, spasticity, focal neurological deficits | Cortical and/or subcortical infarctions and white matter disease | |
| Visual hallucinations, REM sleep disorder, delirium, Parkinsonism | Drawing and frontal/executive function Spares memory | Delirium, Visual hallucinations, Depression, Delusions | Parkinsonism | Posterior parietal atrophy, larger hippocampi than AD | |
| Apathy, Behavioral and personality change, Poor judgement, Poor speech and language | Frontal/executive, Language, Spares memory and drawing | Apathy, Disinhibition, Hyperorality | May be normal If overlap with PSP/CBD; vertical gaze palsy, axial rigidity, dystonia | Frontal and or temporal atrophy, Spares posterior parietal lobe |