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Early Stage Alzheimer

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understanding & recognizing: objects (agnosia) ... Lack of understanding (agnosia) with advanced dementia. CHANGES IN THE BRAIN. Frontal lobe ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Early Stage Alzheimer


1
Early Stage Alzheimers disease A Focus on
CommunicationYork Manor, Fredericton, NBSt.
Thomas University, Third Age Centre, Fredericton,
NB
2
Presentation Plan Background M M B
3
WHAT IS DEMENTIA
  • Dementia is NOT a disease
  • Dementia a syndrome of intellectual decline
  • - Syndrome a collection of symptoms
  • - Symptoms in dementia include
  • memory loss
  • language difficulties
  • difficulties in spatial awareness, skilled
    movement
  • loss of knowledge understanding of the world
  • problems in reasoning, planning, judgement
  • changes in personality, behaviour, emotions

4
CAUSES OF SYMPTOMS OF DEMENTIA
  • Many different challenges to the brain cause the
    symptoms of dementia (difficulties with language
    and understanding, problems with memory...)
  • Knowledge of brain and how different areas are
    affected helps to gain a better understanding
  • One can then better appreciate the perspective of
    the person with dementia
  • This is central to responding to the needs of
    persons with dementia and to promote their
    well-being

5
VARIABILITY OF SYMPTOMS
  • Recognize Individuality of each person
  • Do not assume that dementia is simply a global
    intellectual decline
  • Important to constantly recognize preserved
    abilities, not just abilities affected by
    disorder
  • Brain damage must be set in a wider context that
    covers the persons past and present
    circumstances
  • has the person moved to a new home
  • what work has the person been doing

6
ALZHEIMERS DISEASE
  • Alzheimer s disease most common dementia
  • 2/3 of all dementias
  • Important determinant of hospitalization
  • 65 years 13 of population (2001)
  • 22 of
    population (2031)
  • Accelerated increase with age
  • 5.1
    in 65 years
  • 26
    in 85 years
  • Long duration 8 to 10 years (and more)
  • 50 live in community (usually with family)

7
CHANGES IN THE BRAIN
  • Cerebral cortex Core symptoms of dementia are
    associated with damage to this part of brain
  • FOUR LOBES
  • Temporal lobe Memory, language, understanding
  • Parietal lobe Body control and space
  • Frontal lobe Control of behaviour, planning and
    decision-making
  • Occipital lobe Vision

8
CHANGES IN THE BRAIN
  • Temporal lobe Memory, language, understanding
  • Differentiation of smells, sounds
  • Sorting new information - believed responsible
    for short-term memory
  • Left lobe verbal memory
  • Right lobe visual memory

9
CHANGES IN THE BRAIN
  • Left temporal lobe (verbal memory)
  • understanding language (anomia / aphasia)
  • understanding recognizing objects (agnosia)
  • Right temporal lobe (visual memory)
  • understanding recognizing objects (agnosia)
  • understanding recognizing people
    (prospoagnosia)

10
CHANGES IN THE BRAIN
  • Right parietal lobe
  • Awareness of left side of space (visual neglect)
  • Understanding spatial relations how parts make
    wholes (constructional apraxia)
  • Left parietal lobe
  • Reading (alexia),
  • Writing (agraphia),
  • Understanding numbers and calculations
    (acalculia),
  • Sequencing body movements in skilled action
    (ideomotor apraxia)
  • Lack of understanding (agnosia) with advanced
    dementia

11
CHANGES IN THE BRAIN
  • Frontal lobe
  • Orbitofrontal (upper) region
  • Control of emotions, instincts and behaviour
    (??dysexecutive syndrome social - emotional)
  • Dorsolateral frontal (lower) region
  • Control of thought and planning (dysexecutive
    syndrome cognitive)
  • Occipital lobe Vision
  • Located at back of brain less vulnerable

12
BACKGROUND
  • CAREGIVERS OF PERSONS WITH AD
  • Older family members (usually spouses)
  • Poor health (even in early stage dementia)
  • Faced with long caregiving career
  • (8 10 years 22 hours / week (early stage)
  • (Canadian Study on Health Aging, 1994)
  • FEW INTERVENTIONS FOR EARLY PHASE THAT WORK
  • COMMUNICATION MAJOR CONCERN

13
AFTER DIAGNOSIS
  • Six common themes after diagnosis
  • (Snyder, 2000)
  • Denial
  • Ambivalence around disclosure
  • Wanting things to stay the same
  • Fear of the future
  • Day-to-day experiences of Memory Loss
  • Changes in self-esteem and self-concept

14
AFTER DIAGNOSIS
  • Denial
  • Normal psychological defence when coping with
    uncomfortable issue situation
  • Person with AD may wish to dissociate from
    diagnosis because of stigma
  • Next of kin, friends may not accept diagnosis
  • Person with AD at times may forget that has AD
  • NEED emotional support to accept diagnosis and
    deal with consequences

15
AFTER DIAGNOSIS
  • 2. Ambivalence about talking about diagnosis
  • Myths about AD
  • Is it contagious?,
  • What will others think?
  • Negative attitudes may proliferate if lack of
    education
  • NEED person with AD and family members need to
    be better informed

16
AFTER DIAGNOSIS
  • 3. Wanting things to stay the same
  • Characteristics of symptoms of AD
  • Variable, fluctuating, sporadic, erratic,
    random, always changing
  • Good days, difficult bad days
  • Lack of control over ones life is alarming and
    difficult to accept
  • Normal and common reaction

17
AFTER DIAGNOSIS
  • 4. Fear of the future
  • Person with AD Fear of loosing part of oneself
  • Whats going to happen to me?
  • Caregiver Fear of loosing the family member as
    he-she was before
  • Whats going to happen to my loved one?

18
AFTER DIAGNOSIS
  • 5. Day to day experiences of Memory Loss
  • Memory loss changes from day to day
    variability, inconsistency...
  • Person with AD
  • Am I the same person? Can I do this today?
  • Caregiver .
  • Whats wrong with him-her? Yesterday he-she
    had no problem with this...

19
AFTER DIAGNOSIS
  • 6. Changes in self-esteem and self-concept
  • People live a life where change is constant
  • It becomes hard to define oneself
  • - An editor may loose ability to recall words
  • - A homemaker is less able to prepare meals
  • - xxx
  • Focus on the person roles in life, qualities,
    relationships, friends, family...

20
Communication
  • Communication major concern in early AD (refs)
  • - Characterized by problems related to
  • ? Memory
  • long-term (declarative nondeclarative)
  • working (short-term) memory
  • ? attention
  • ? language (comprehension production)
  • ? affect

21
Communication - Memory
  • Memory LONG-term memory
  • (declarative nondeclarative)
  • 1. DECLARATIVE (explicit memory)
  • consciously learned knowledge - facts
    (what-who)
  • 1.1 Episodic memory (personal life events)
  • EARLY AD OLDER memories intact
  • forget RECENT
    personal events
  • Recognition memory better preserved than
    recall
  • Strategies pictorial/verbal
    recognition,
  • work within span
    capacity

22
Communication - Memory
  • 1.2 Semantic memory
  • (knowledge world, facts, schema)
  • EARLY AD Impoverished vocabulary
  • (naming word-finding problems)
  • 1.3 Lexical memory (knowledge words rules)
  • EARLY AD Few difficulties

23
Communication - Memory
  • 2. NONDECLARATIVE (implicit memory)
  • (NON fact NON volitional memory)
  • automatic acquisition of verbal
    nonverbal
  • knowledge and skills
  • concerned with the how to perspective
  • Examples
  • Procedural memory (sports, writing,
    playing piano)
  • Habits (evening bath, morning coffee)
  • Associations (stopping at a red light)

24
Communication - Memory
  • WORKING memory (short-term memory)
  • Three components
  • 1. central executive (and two subsystems)
  • 2. Visuospatial sketchpad (visual subcomponent)
  • 3. Articulatory/phonological loop (verbal
    subcomponent)
  • Functions
  • Goal directed behaviour problem solving, long
    term planning, making judgements - comparisons

25
Communication - Memory
  • WORKING memory (short-term memory)
  • MAJOR impact on communication in early AD
  • COMMUNICATION PROBLEMS result from
  • difficulties with ADLs IADLs
  • making
    judgements
  • finding
    ones way - getting lost

26
Communication - Attention
  • ATTENTION (concentration)
  • (related to executive function since problem-
  • solving requires a certain degree of attention)
  • 1. Sustained attention focus over longer time
    period (generally well retained in early AD)
  • 2. Divided attention focus on more than one
    activity at a time (PROBLEMATIC in early AD)

27
Communication - Attention
  • ATTENTION
  • 3. Selective attention a.) ability to focus
    while ignoring other stimuli (noise) b.) ability
    to switch attention between 2 activities
    (shifting sets)
  • (HIGHLY PROBLEMATIC in early AD)
  • COMMUNICATION PROBLEMS in regard to following TV
    - radio, conversing with 1 persons

28
Communication - Language
  • LANGUAGE
  • 1. Language COMPREHENSION
  • Reading comprehension some difficulties in
    early AD
  • Auditory comprehension intact if easy to
    understand
  • NB Combined (written oral) better for longer
    message

29
Communication - Language
  • 2. Language PRODUCTION (written, oral)
  • 2.1 WRITTEN skills
  • Dysgraphia/agraphia problems
  • exception words (cough, yacht)
  • phonological errors (tomb-toom),
  • perserveration (repetition of letters
    lamppp)
  • Graphomotor (mechanics of writing) some
  • problems with spontaneous writing
    letters

30
Communication - Language
  • 2. Language PRODUCTION
  • 2.2 ORAL skills
  • SYNTAX (sentence structure, word order)
    minimal problems when sentence structure simple
  • SEMANTICS
  • (lexicon knowledge vocabulary, word
    meaning)
  • intact language production when depends on
    nondeclarative memory
  • (over learned automatic speech hello,
    thanks)

31
Communication - Language
  • Continued 2.2 Oral Skills
  • Problems in EARLY AD (vary between persons)
  • - paucity of speech
  • - word-finding difficulties
  • - word production
  • - naming
  • - word-finding
  • - broken speech
  • - circumlocutions
  • - stammering

32
Communication - Language
  • LANGUAGE
  • 2. Language PRODUCTION
  • 2.2 ORAL skills
  • PRAGMATICS (how language is used
  • contextually appropriate language)

33
Communication - Language
  • LANGUAGE production
  • Problems in EARLY AD
  • - repetitiveness
  • - poverty of vocabulary and range of
    expression
  • - increased response time
  • - pausing more frequently
  • - vague speech irrelevant comments
  • - self-centred conversation
  • - circuitous speech
  • ?Problems with?complexity of discourse context

34
Communication Affect, Beahviours
  • AFFECT and BEHAVIOURAL ASPECT
  • 1. Emotive-affective changes (variability)
  • e.g., anger, insensitivity, anxiety,
    sadness, frustration, self-centredness,
    irritabilityUNDERSTANDABLE!
  • 2. Passive behaviours (infrequent - early
    stage)
  • e.g., apathy, withdrawl, blunted
    emptions, lack of responsiveness, ? spontaneity,
    disinterest, ? enthusiasm, reclusiveness
  • 3. Psychomotor slowing (infrequent - early
    stage)
  • e.g., reduction in physical activity,?in
    bed - rest, ?gait - especially noticeable

35
Communication - Perception
  • PERCEPTION
  • Sensitivity to sound
  • Major problem for large proportion of persons
    with
  • early AD due to ?ability to filter out extraneous
    noise
  • This problem is magnified when combined with
  • - attention related problems (present in early
    AD)
  • - hearing deficits of many elderly persons

36
Communication and Caregivers
  • Communication important concern for family
    caregivers because person with AD - problems
  • - memory (short-term, ?vocabualry wordfinding,
    ?recall - ?recognition)
  • - attention (selective - divided, noise)
  • - language production (verbal - wordfinding, )
  • - language comprehension (too fast - slow)
  • - conversational abilities (discourse)
  • - behaviours
  • - emotions - affect (? lability)
  • Needs of caregivers KNOWLEDGE and SKILLS to
    better communicate with their family member

37
Conception of Communication Study
  • In response to this problem
  • Development of an individualized
    psycho-educational intervention centred on
    communication conceived for family caregivers of
    persons with cognitive problems associated with
    the early stage of Alzheimers disease
  • Focus of Program Knowledge and Skills in
    regard to communication

38
Communication-focused Program
  • Five themes, five modules, five meetings (2 hr.)
  • Memories are important
  • What do we talk about today?
  • 2 . Remembering and forgetting
  • Where did I put my keys?
  • Why doesnt he/she listen?
  • How can I get his/her attention?
  • 4. Caring for my family member.
  • 5. Emotions How can I better communicate with my
    family member?

39
Module 1
  • Communication MAXIMIZE STRENGTHS
  • Memory aids
  • ONE subjet at a time, changing subjets
  • Reading writing
  • Word-finding - naming
  • Short simple sentences
  • Normal moderate rate of speech
  • ? nouns specific words
  • ? pronouns non specific words
  • Common and familiar words
  • Questions YES-NO 2-choice answers
  • ?????Help - encourage conversations

40
Module 2 MEMORY
  • Communication FORGETTING - REMEMBERING
  • Forgetting to FINISH a task
  • Forgetting WHERE one placed something
  • Forgetting TO DO something
  • WRITTEN reminders
  • ONE place for important items - information
  • Putting things in the WRONG place
  • Remembering the past, forgetting the present
  • Forgetting MEDICATIONS
  • Forgetting to turn ON - OFF household appliances
  • REPEATING the same stories questions

41
Module 3 ATTENTION
  • CommunicationATTENTION - ENVIRONMENT influences
  • Talking face to face
  • Crowded places, many people
  • Noise
  • Volume and tone of voice
  • Getting the attention of the person
  • More time to reply
  • Talking and doing something (at the same time)
  • Several persons talking (at the same time)
  • Staying on topic
  • The first message, the second message

42
Module 4 Daily life activities
  • Communication ACTIVITIES OF DAILY LIVING.
  • Using the telephone - computer
  • Getting dressed, eating
  • Activities which require several steps
  • Personal grooming
  • Restless behaviour, unable to sit still
  • Needing more time to do something
  • Getting lost (cannot find the way)
  • Needing more sleep rest
  • Waking up at night (cannot sleep)
  • Knowing the date time, counting things
    (money)

43
Module 5 Emotions
  • Communication EMOTIONS
  • The family member who
  • IGNORES others
  • Feels SAD
  • Gets UPSET when furniture moved about
  • Gets UPSET when in an unfamiliar place
  • Gets UPSET when he/she cant express him-herself
  • Gets UPSET when he/she doesnt understand
  • Gets UPSET when cant do hobbies - sports
  • Gets UPSET when cant find something
  • Gets UPSET when he/she cant find the way

44
STUDY PARTICIPANTS (n 50)
  • GROUPS Experimental (program) Control
    (flier)
  • (n25)
    (n25)
  • Gender 20 (f) 5 (m) 21
    (f) 4(m)
  • Age (mean) 59.1 yr
    64.8 yr
  • Education (all completed elementary school)
  • university 14
    7
  • Cohabitation 10
    11
  • Relationship - children 15
    - children 11
  • - partner 7
    - partner 11
  • - other 3
    - other 3
  • Significant differences between the 2 groups

45
RESULTS
  • Significant effects of program
  • - knowledge (T2 et T3)
  • - degré de dérangement (T2 maintenu au T3)
  • - efficacité personnelle (T3)
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