Aging Versus Dementia Due To Alzheimer's Disease
Aging Versus Dementia Due To Alzheimer's Disease
Aging Versus Dementia Due To Alzheimer's Disease
Case 1
A 64 year old judge was referred by her PCP for evaluation of memory loss. Her husband reports memory loss and repeating questions for about 18 months. Her colleagues and law clerks have expressed concerns due to several small mistakes. She reports that she has fallen a little behind at work, and is planning to retire in 1 month because she has lost the trust and confidence of her colleagues
Case 1
She has a history of well-controlled hypertension and takes only an antihypertensive medication. She has no other medical or psychiatric history. There is no history of stroke, TIA, alcohol abuse, gait disorder, falls, or head trauma. Her parents died in their 60s of old age. She works as a judge and lives with her husband. She states that at one time her IQ was 170.
Increase risk ApoE4, diabetes, current smoking, depression Decrease risk Physical activity, Mediterranean diet/vegetable intake, cognitive training/cognitively engaging activities
5
10 Signs of Alzheimers
Memory loss that disrupts daily life (amnesia) Challenges in planning or solving problems (executive dysfunction) Difficulty completing familiar tasks at home, at work, or at leisure (executive dysfunction) Confusion with time or place (disorientation) Trouble understanding visual images and spatial relationships (visual agnosias)
10 Signs of Alzheimers
New problems with words in speaking or writing (dysnomia, anomia) Misplacing things and losing the ability to retrace steps (amnesia) Decreased or poor judgment (executive dysfunction) Withdrawal from work or social activities (apathy) Changes in mood and personality (depression, anxiety)
Normal aging Cant find your keys Search for casual names and words Briefly forget conversation details Cant find a recipe Forget to enter a check Cancel a date with friends Miss an occasional turn
Early Alzheimers disease Routinely place important items in odd places Forget names of family and common objects Frequently forget entire conversations Cant follow recipe directions Can no longer manage checkbook Withdraw from usual interests Get lost in familiar places
ADLs
Complex
Working, living alone, driving, keeping appointments, handling finances, daily medications
Basic
Dressing, bathing, grooming, toileting, walking, transfers, eating
Case 1
Pleasant, cooperative, and wellappearing elderly woman. Vital signs normal, as is the general medical examination. Mental status examination reveals good attention with deficits in memory, orientation, language, and visuospatial skills. The MMSE score is 25/30, with points off for orientation and memory, consistent with a mild dementia.
Case 1
The remainder of the neurological examination reveals normal eye movements, strength, tone, sensation and coordination. There are no signs of parkinsonism. Reflexes are 2+ and symmetric. Gait is normal. There are no asymmetric features.
Case 1
A CBC, chemistry panel, thyroid function tests, and B12 were all normal. A test for syphilis was negative. A head MRI revealed cortical atrophy and periventricular white matter changes (small vessel ischemic changes). No tumor, hemorrhage, subdural hematoma, or large cerebral infarct. Neuropsychologic evaluation confirmed mild dementia, with deficits in memory, language, visuospatial skills, and frontal/executive function, and a lower than expected IQ.
Case 1
has multiple cognitive deficits which impair her functional abilities and represent a cognitive decline. There is no evidence for delirium or depression by history, examination, or laboratory evaluation. Diagnosed with mild dementia due to probable Alzheimers disease.
Case 1
prescribed a cholinesterase inhibitor; effects and side-effects of the drug were discussed. advised to continue treatment for hypertension with her primary care physician. discussed prognosis, advance directives, and limitations concerning complex ADLs, including driving, handling finances, taking medications... recommended ad libitum physical activity, social activity, and mental activity. Qualified and interested, thus offered enrollment in a 12 month clinical trial of drug x (add-on to current drug therapy).
March 2011
US life expectancy hits new record more than 78 years old (75.5 for men, 80.5 for women)
October 2011
World population reaches 7 billion, and graying rapidly
(Washington Post)
20
21 September 2009
World Alzheimer Day; World Alzheimer Report released www.actionalz.org/about_wad.asp
Diagnostic criteria
A. Dementia Interferes with ability to function at work or at usual activities A decline from a previous level of functioning Not delirium or psychiatric disorder Diagnosed by history, examination Involves at least 2 cognitive domains: Memory Reasoning and judgment Visuospatial Language Personality, behavior, comportment
Diagnostic criteria
A. Probable AD Dementia Insidious onset Worsening of cognition over time Amnestic vs. non-amnestic presentation Not due to another dementia diagnosis
B. Probable AD with evidence of AD pathophysiology Ab (CSF or amyloid PET) Neuronal injury (CSF tau, FDG-PET, structural MRI)
Neuropathology of AD
Kretzschmar, 2009
Low
A more limited distribution or severity
Intermediate
Limbic regions
High
Neocortex
infrequent
I/II
moderate
III/IV
frequent
V/VI
COOH
a-secretase
b-secretase (BACE-1)
g-secretase (presenilin)
g-secretase Ab
p3
Genetics of sporadic AD
Apolipoprotein E (ApoE)
Donepezil (Aricept)
18F-AV45
AD 77 F MMSE 24
Healthy 74 F MMSE 30
Confidential
Tau
CSF biomarkers
AD
Normal
FDGPET: AD
MCI
Langbaum et al, Neuroimage 2009
MCI Progression
Summary
We are witnessing a growing epidemic of dementia in the US and the world, most of which is AD The amyloid hypothesis is alive and well, and does not exclude other important and essential pathologic processes The genetics of familial AD provides the strongest evidence for the amyloid hypothesis Despite recent high-profile failures, many active trials target Ab/amyloid generation or clearance Other AD trials target other essential pathologic processes, with the probable result of a therapeutic cocktail (as now)
Summary
Current (FDA-approved) therapies for AD provide consistent yet modest, temporary, and palliative benefits We are searching for disease-modifying treatments to halt dementia progression, or prevent dementia onset We are in need of validated biomarkers for: screening, diagnostic accuracy, evidence of efficacy, reduction of the cost of clinical trials (decreased numbers of participants) Treatments and prevention will increasingly target subjects with MCI, then healthy high-risk individuals Future treatments will be tailored to ApoE genotype (pharmacogenomics, personalized medicine)
memory.georgetown.edu