| Literature DB >> 34881077 |
Abstract
Depression and dementia are the most common neuropsychiatric disorders in the older adult population. There are a certain number of depressed patients who visit outpatient clinics because they suspect dementia due to similarities in the clinical symptoms in both disorders. Depressive symptoms associated with dementia may be diagnosed with depression, and treatment with antidepressants is continued for a long time. Depression and dementia differ in their treatment approaches and subsequent courses, and it is necessary to carefully differentiate between the two in the clinical practice of dementia treatment. In this review, I describe the similarities between depression and dementia and how to differentiate depression in dementia treatment based on the differences and emphasize that there is a significant potential to cure depression, in contrast to dementia, for which there is currently no fundamental therapy. Therefore, it is important to recognize that depression and dementia may present with common symptoms and to appropriately differentiate depressed patients who are suspected of having dementia. Dementia is a disorder in which cognitive dysfunction is caused by a variety of causative diseases and conditions, resulting in impairment of activities of daily living. However, current medical science has had difficulty finding a cure for the causative disease. Based on clinical findings, it has also been shown that the degree of symptoms for preexisting psychiatric disorders is alleviated as the brain ages. In the presence of dementia, the speed of the alleviation will increase. The importance of focusing on the positive aspects of aging is also discussed. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; dementia; depression; older adults; pseudodementia
Year: 2021 PMID: 34881077 PMCID: PMC8612610 DOI: 10.14336/AD.2021.0526
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging Dis ISSN: 2152-5250 Impact factor: 6.745
Figure 1.The possible mechanisms leading from depression to the development of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal dysfunction, decreased neurotrophic factors, and chronic inflammation play a central role in the pathogenesis by which depression causes AD. Increased glucocorticoids and proinflammatory cytokines and decreased brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) lead to high beta-amyloid toxicity, which first causes hippocampal atrophy. As a result, the progression from depression to AD is facilitated. HPA; hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal.
Differentiating depressive pseudodementia from dementia.
| Depressive pseudodementia | Dementia | |
|---|---|---|
| Response and attitude toward functional decline | Attitudes that overestimate and pessimistically emphasize the decline in abilities | Lack of interest in or denial of diminished capacity, or an attitude of mending |
| Type of onset | Onset time can be identified on a weekly to monthly basis. | Slow onset; onset time only identifiable in seasons or years. |
| Variability and environmental reactivity | Diurnal variation that worsens in the morning; constancy even when the environment changes | Variations in attention and concentration suggest DLB; mood and motivation improve with positive environment and interpersonal interaction. |
| Psychiatric symptoms | Feelings of sadness and remorse are present that are sometimes accompanied by feelings of hopelessness and thoughts of death, and sometimes accompanied by psychic delusions, delusions of guilt, and delusions of poverty; in rare cases, delusions of nihilism and immortality may accompany the symptoms. | Lack of sadness and remorse, lethargy, and indifference (apathy) are the main symptoms. Emotional incontinence suggests VaD, sometimes accompanied by delusions of being robbed; repeated and specific visual hallucinations suggest DLB, mixed apathy and homophobic behavior suggest FTD. |
| Movement symptoms | Not acceptable. | Parkinsonism and easy falling suggest DLB and VaD, and hemiplegia and dysarthria suggest VaD. |
| Sleep | Wakes up in the morning; going to sleep is an obstacle. | Gradual rhythm disturbance, day and night reversal; REM sleep behavior disorder suggests DLB. |
| Appetite, weight | Decreased appetite, sometimes increased appetite, with weight changes on a weekly to monthly basis. | Slow weight loss: anorexia, overeating, and rapid weight gain suggest FTD. |
| Simple cognitive function test findings | Answers such as "I don't know" or "I don't remember" and slow thinking. Careless mistakes in continuous subtraction and reverse chanting; delayed playback is impaired, but reaffirmation is maintained; figure sketching and drawing will be maintained. | Wrong answers and mending, and |
| Morphological brain imaging | Normal or age-related changes, mild atrophy of the hippocampus, olfactory cortex, amygdala, and frontal lobe, and mild deep white matter ischemic changes. | Atrophy of the hippocampus and olfactory cortex and parietal lobe suggests AD; medium to large infarcts, multiple infarcts, infarcts at strategic sites, and high levels of white matter lesions are indicative of VaD; severe frontal and temporal lobe atrophy suggest FTD. |
| Functional brain imaging | Normal or mildly impaired frontal lobe function. | Functional decline in the posterior cingulate gyrus and anterior portion of the scapula suggests AD; functional decline in the occipital lobe suggests DLB; a high degree of frontal and temporal lobe dysfunction suggests FTD. |
| Other functional imaging tests | Dopamine transporter and MIBG myocardial scintigraphy are normal. | Decreased dopamine transporter uptake in the basal ganglia or decreased uptake on MIBG myocardial scintigraphy suggests DLB. |
AD; Alzheimer's disease, VaD; vascular dementia, DLB; dementia with Lewy bodies, FTD; frontotemporal dementia