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Dementia with Lewy body

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Dementia affects 7% of patients older than 65 years and 30% of those ... REM- sleep wakefulness dissociation : daytime hypersomnolence, hallucination, cataplexy ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Dementia with Lewy body


1
Dementia with Lewy body
  • Lancet Neurol 2004 3 19-28

2
Introduction
  • Dementia affects 7 of patients older than 65
    years and 30 of those aged over 80 years
  • DLB is the second most common cause of
    neurodegenerative dementia in the elderly
  • Abnormal aggregation of the presynaptic protein
    alpha- synuclein

3
Diagnostic concepts
  • DLB and PDD have clinical and pathological
    similarity
  • 1 year rule is used to separate DLB from PDD
  • Onset of dementia within 12 months of
    parkinsonism -gt DLB
  • If more than 12 months -gt PDD
  • Both disorders have Lewy body

4
Clinical and pathological criteria for DLB
  • Clinical features in DLB and PDD are similar
  • Including fluctuating neuropsychological
    function, predominant visual hallucination
  • Heterogeneity of pathological finding in DLB , AD
    , VaD

5
Epidemiology
  • Prevalence of DLB 0.7 in people aged 65 years
    or older
  • 10 of all dementia cases
  • Age over 85 yrs -gt prevalence 5.0 and 22 of
    all dementia
  • No study about age, sex and risk factor for DLB

6
Clinical phenomenology of DLB
  • Cognitive
  • Cognitive impairment is present in most of cases
    but not all
  • Typically recurrent episodes of confusion with
    progressive deterioration
  • Combination of cortical and subcortical
    neuropsychological impairment
  • Prominent frontosubcortical and visuospatial
    dysfunction ( DDx from AD )
  • Fluctuation in cognitive function 50 75
  • ( vary over minutes or days )

7
Psychiatric
  • Common
  • Predominantly visual hallucination, auditory
    hallucination, delusion, apathy and anxiety
  • Present early
  • Persist (over 20 to 52 weeks)
  • Hallucination similar to PDD vivid , colorful
  • 3-dimensional, mute image of animate objects
  • Visual hallucination associated with deficit in
    cortical acetylcholine and better response to
    AchE inhibitors

8
Neurological
  • Extrapyramidal signs 25-50
  • Severity of parkinsonism equals to PD
  • Axial bias greater postural instability and
    facial impassivity, less tremor
  • non- dopaminergic motor involvement (speech,
    posture, balance ) associate with dementia

9
Sleep
  • REM sleep behaviour disorder vivid and
    frightening dreams
  • Frequent associated with synucleinopathy eg. DLB,
    PD , MSA
  • REM- sleep wakefulness dissociation daytime
    hypersomnolence, hallucination, cataplexy

10
Autonomic failure
  • Orthostatic hypotension
  • Carotid sinus hypersensitivity
  • Dizziness, presyncope, syncope, falls
  • Autonomic dysfunction risk for falls 65
  • Urinary incontinence

11
Disease progression and survival
  • No difference between DLB and AD in survival
    from onset until death or may be worse in DLB
  • Severe extrapyramidal signs and frequent fall -gt
    rapid disease progression or poorer survival is
    not known

12
Clinical diagnosis of DLB
  • Clinical assessment history, full mental,
    cognitive, and neurological examination
  • Consensus Guidelines for the clinical diagnosis
    of probable and possible DLB
  • Meeting of International Psychogeriatric
    Association and European Movement Disorder
    Society Participants

13
Consensus Guidelines for the clinical diagnosis
of probable and possible DLB
  • Central features
  • Progressive cognitive decline of sufficient
    magnitude to interfere with normal social and
    occupational function. Prominent or persistent
    memory impairment does not necessary occur in the
    early stage but is evident with progression in
    most cases. Deficits on tests of attention,
    fronto- subcortical skill and visuospatial
    ability are prominent.

14
Consensus Guidelines for the clinical diagnosis
of probable and possible DLB
  • Core features ( 2 core features essential for
    probable, 1 for possible DLB )
  • 1. Fluctuating cognition with variation in
    attention and alertness
  • 2. Recurrent visual hallucination typically
    well formed and detailed
  • 3. Spontaneous features of parkinsonism

15
Consensus Guidelines for the clinical diagnosis
of probable and possible DLB
  • Supporting features
  • - repeated falls
  • - syncope
  • - transient loss of consciousness
  • - neuroleptic sensitivity
  • - systematized delusion
  • - hallucinations in other modalities
  • - REM sleep behaviour disorder
  • - depression

16
Consensus Guidelines for the clinical diagnosis
of probable and possible DLB
  • Features less likely to be present
  • - History of stroke
  • - Any other physical illness or brain
    disorder to interfere cognitive performance

17
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19
Differential diagnosis
  • Alzheimers disease
  • Vascular dementia
  • PDD
  • Parkinson plus syndrome (PSP, MSA)
  • Creutzfeldt- Jakob disease

20
Laboratory and neuroimaging
  • EEG early slowing, epoch-by-epoch fluctuation ,
    transient temporal slow-wave activity
  • MRI hippocampal and medial temporal lobe
    volume are preserve
  • SPECT occipital hypoperfusion
  • Dopamine transporter loss in caudate and putamen
    (sens 83 , spec 100 )

21
AD
DLB
Coronal MRI in AD and DLB matched for dementia
22
SPECT of dopamine transporter at level of striatum
23
Pathophysiology of DLB
  • Consensus criteria for DLB include
  • - ubiquitin immunohistochemistry
  • - 3 categories brainstem- predominant
  • limbic- predominant
  • neocortical-
    predominant
  • Alpha- synuclein is a better marker

24
  • Lewy bodies are intraneuronal cytoplasmic
    inclusion stain with ubiquitin
  • Composed of
  • straight neurofilament
  • Surrounding amorphous material

25
  • Alpha-synucleinopathies
  • - DLB
  • - PD with or without dementia
  • - primary autonomic failure

26
Pathophysiology of DLB
  • Number of cortical LB not associated with
    severity and duration of dementia
  • Lewy neurites and neurotransmitter deficit link
    to clinical symptoms
  • Anterior and inferior temporal lobe are
    associated with well-formed visual hallucination
  • Nigrostriatal pathway -gt parkinsonism

27
Pathophysiology of DLB
  • Most of DLB have AD pathology cortical amyloid
    plaques, neurofibrillary tangles
  • LB occurs up to 2/3 of early onset
  • familial AD
  • Numerous cortical LB -gt functional neuronal
    impairment

28
Management of DLB
  • 1. Accurate diagnosis
  • 2. Identification of target symptom with patient
    and carer
  • 3. Non-pharmacological interventions
  • 4. Pharmacological intervention

29
Management of DLB
  • Target symptom include
  • - extrapyramidal motor feature
  • - cognitive impairment
  • - neuropsychiatric features (hallucination
    depression , sleep disorder, behavioral
    disturbance )
  • - autonomic dysfunction

30
Non-pharmacological management of DLB
  • Psychosocial treatment
  • 1. Maintain alliance with patient and family
  • 2. Monitor safety and intervence
  • 3. Decrease the hazards of wandering
  • 4. Educate patient and family
  • 5. Advice family source of care and support
  • 6. Guide family in financial and legal issues

31
Pharmacological management
  • Antiparkinsonian drug lowest dose of levodopa
    monotherapy
  • Neuroleptic agent provoke severe EPS
  • 50 in DLB, increase MR 2-3 times
  • low dose atypical antipsychotic drugs
  • Cholinesterase inhibitor significant improved
    in fluctuating cognitive impairment, visual
    hallucination, apathy
  • , anxiety, sleep disturbance

32
Global awareness of DLB and educational and
treatment needs
  • Most dementia research in North America,
    Australia and Europe
  • Developing countries -gt less awareness
  • Increase morbidity and mortality
  • Need diagnostic criteria for PDD
  • Need biological markers for DLB
  • Educational materials internet

33
Conclusions
  • DLB is one of neurodegenerative disorder
  • Alpha-synucleinopathies
  • - DLB
  • - PD with or without dementia
  • - primary autonomic failure
  • DDx from PDD, AD, VaD

34
Conclusion
  • Elderly with cognitive impairment
  • Asking for DLB diagnosis
  • - visual hallucination
  • - REM sleep behavior
  • - repeated falls
  • - neuroleptic sensitivity
  • Dopaminergic neuroimaging may useful
  • Good response to AchE inhibitor
  • Avoid neuroleptic drugs

35
Thank you for your attention
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