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Title: Dementia, Neuropathology


1
Dementia, Neuropathology Neuropsychology
  • Bruce Reed, PhD
  • UC Davis

2
disclosures
  • We gratefully acknowledge support for this
    conference from the National Institute on Aging,
    grant R13AG030995-01A1.
  • The views expressed in written conference
    materials or publications and by speakers and
    moderators do not necessarily reflect the
    official policies of the Department of Health and
    Human Services nor does mention by trade
    names,commercial practices, or organizations
    imply endorsement by the U.S.Government.

3
The high costs of dementia
  • Disability
  • Institutionalization
  • Annual costs gt150 Billion now
  • Mortality
  • Complicates all medical management

4
Cognitive syndromes of aging
  • Dementia Multiple acquired persistent cognitive
    impairments that cause disability
  • Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) either a) a
    circumscribed cognitive impairment or b) multiple
    cognitive impairments not associated with
    significant functional impairment
  • Delirium a transient confusional state
  • Normal Cognitive Aging

5
Dementia
  • Multiple acquired persistent cognitive
    impairments that limit important daily functions
  • A syndrome a defined set of symptoms without a
    particular etiology
  • Disease a pathological process that produces a
    characteristic set of symptoms. Many different
    diseases cause dementia
  • Dementia has biological causes and biological
    correlates, but it is defined behaviorally

6
MCI
  • A new name for a long-recognized state that is
    intermediate to normal and dementia
  • Subject of intense research now as a prodromal
    state to AD
  • converts to AD at 10-15 per year
  • Some do not worsen, some get better
  • Etiologically heterogeneous

7
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8
Individual paths of change over 6 years in
persons cognitively normal at baseline
Wilson et. al. Psychol Aging 2002
9
Many different pathologies cause dementia
  • Degenerative Brain Diseases
  • Vascular
  • Intoxications
  • Infections
  • Metabolic Disorders
  • Nutritional Disorders
  • Space-Occupying Lesions
  • Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus
  • Psychiatric Disorders

10
Degenerative brain diseases
  • Alzheimers disease
  • Parkinsons disease
  • Dementia with Lewy Bodies
  • Frontotemporal dementia (Picks, FTLD)
  • Huntingtons disease
  • Progressive supranuclear palsy
  • Corticobasalgangionic degeneration
  • Etc.

11
How important is it to distinguish between
dementia and the illnesses that cause dementia ?
  • Depends on the question
  • Very important for diagnosis and disease-specific
    prognosis
  • Tends to be important in treatment trials
  • May not be important for brain-behavior
    relationships
  • May not be important for health services studies
  • Depends on the sample
  • How prevalent a particular pathology is likely to
    be
  • What the mix is likely to include

12
AD and CVD are the 1 and 2 major causes of
dementia in the elderly
13
Dr. Alois Alzheimer
14
1 Prevalence
  • Prevalence is very low prior to age 60 and
    doubles every 5 years thereafter reaching 30-50
    above age 85

15
The prevalence of AD is strongly linked to age
From Nessbaum Ellis (2003). NEJM, 348 1356.
16
2 Symptoms
  • Severe episodic memory impairment is hallmark
  • Language, spatial, and other reasoning
    impairments follow
  • Personality generally preserved
  • Behavior disturbance common but highly variable

17
3 Course
  • Insidious onset, gradual progression
  • Eventually leads to total disability (total care)
  • averages about 9 years from diagnosis to death
    with wide variability.

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Clock House Copy
20
Progressive decline of multiple abilities over 4
years
21
Late Self portraits of William Utermohlen
1996
1998
2000
22
Brain Basics
23
4 Pathology Neurofibrillary tangles (tau) and
neuritic plaques (?-amyloid) are the defining
pathological markers of Alzheimers disease
plaque
tangles
24
Amyloid in the brain
Courtesy of ADEAR (NIA)
25
Two enzymes cut normal amyloid into fragments
Courtesy of ADEAR (NIA)
26
Fragments join and form plaques
Courtesy of ADEAR (NIA)
27
AD and the Brain
Neurofibrillary Tangles
Slide 18
28
Progression of tangles in AD has a
characteristic spatial distribution
29
Figure 1. Evolution of amyloid deposits in AD..
Progression of amyloid in AD is diffuse
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31
Atrophy of the brain caused by Alzheimers disease
Brain affected by AD Normal elderly brain
32
Markers of Alzheimers Disease Hippocampal
Atrophy
Normal
Atrophy
33
Atrophy of the hippocampus
normal size
Moderate atrophy
Severe atrophy
34
5 Causes
  • Etiologically complex
  • Genetic factors are strong, but complex and not
    yet defined for most cases
  • environmental factors remain largely undefined

35
Genes and AD
  • 3 known mutations and 1 chromosomal abnormality
    cause AD
  • All cause young onset AD
  • All affect amyloid production or processing
  • Together they account for under 5 of all cases
  • There is one known major genetic risk factor for
    AD--apolipoprotein e

36
6 treatment
  • many symptomatic treatments
  • Drugs for cognitive symptoms have weak effects
  • no disease modifying treatments

37
Galantamine efficacy at 6 months
Raskin et al., Neurology 2000
38
Ischemic Vascular dementia
  • Dementia that is due to cerebral vascular disease

39
1) Vascular lesions
  • Infarcts death of brain tissue secondary to
    loss of blood supply
  • White matter changes (WMH, WML) loss of
    integrity secondary to partial ischemia and
    micro-infarction
  • (?) Cortical Atrophy
  • (?) Hippocampal sclerosis

40
Vascular lesions on MRI
Lacunar Infarction
White Matter Hyperintensities
41
2) There is a wide spectrum of cerebral vascular
disease
Stroke Silent Brain Infarction White Matter
Hyperintensities Accelerated Brain Atrophy
42
3) Differential diagnosis of AD from vascular
dementia is difficult
  • AD clinics tend to obtain unrepresentative
    samples that are disproportionately pure AD.
  • Community based studies find that mixed pathology
    is very common

43
Effect of sample source on prevalence estimates
  • NACC database in 2003
  • 1054 cases from 30 academic Alzheimers disease
    research programs
  • AD was the primary neuropathological diagnosis in
    921
  • Community based, large unselective sample (CFAS)
  • 100 of 209 cases demented
  • 64 with pathologically defined AD
  • 78 with pathologically defined CVD
  • most patients had mixed disease

44
4) AD and vascular dementia appear to be
complexly related
  • Share multiple risk factors
  • May share pathogenic mechanisms, e.g. vascular
    disease may (?) promote AD pathology
  • When they co-occur, are effects
  • synergistic ?
  • Additive ?
  • Diminishingly additive ?

45
Measuring dementia data types
  • Laboratory (blood, csf, etc.)
  • Medical (neurological) exams
  • Brain imaging
  • Measures of daily function
  • Neuropsychological tests
  • Psychiatric measures

46
Neuropsychological tests
  • Standardized tests of cognitive ability. Used in
    defining cognitive ability (and change), and in
    differential diagnosis of dementia.
  • Psychometric dynamic range, should vary in
    relation to differences in ability
  • Performance of individuals can be characterized
    in raw score, percentile or other scaled metrics
    relative to a normative sample.
  • Tests are defined by items, and what they do, not
    what they are named.

47
Global measures
  • Used to quantitate overall premorbid ability
    and present ability
  • Tests of native (premorbid) ability
  • IQ (WAIS)
  • NART
  • Tests of current ability (dementia screens,
    dementia severity measures
  • DRS ADAS MMSE
  • All tap a variety of specific domains how many,
    which, and how they are weighted varies

48
Cognitive Domains
  • Attention
  • Memory
  • Language
  • Spatial Reasoning
  • Executive Function

49
Domain-specific tests
  • Measure more or less single functions or sets of
    closely related functions
  • Characterize the nature of impairment rather than
    its simple presence.
  • Useful
  • when specific impairments may be obscured on
    omnibus measures
  • in differential diagnosis
  • For brain behavior correlations
  • As building blocks for global measures
  • Anatomic substrate of particular functions is
    generally both focal and distributed
  • usually correlate moderately, sometimes highly

50
Memory
  • Long term, short term, working memory, remote
    memory, recent memory, semantic memory,
  • Episodic memory refers to the learning, storage,
    and deliberate recall of context-specific
    (experiential) information
  • Memory is to some degree modality specific, esp.
    verbal vs. nonverbal
  • Hippocampus is a key structure supporting the
    process of forming new memories

51
Neuropsychological tests of memory
  • Are legion
  • Most commonly used are paragraph recall and list
    learning
  • Both require learning of novel material, and free
    recall after a delay of 10-30 minutes
  • Recognition testing often added
  • Yield multiple measures composite or delayed
    recall measures used most often.

52
Executive function
  • Not a single function but a set of functions
  • Key functions
  • generation of thought and behavior (response
    options, problem solving strategies)
  • Regulation of behavior (initiation, monitoring,
    modifying in response to feedback) of behavior
  • especially under circumstances where habitual
    responses are unavailable or inappropriate
  • Active online manipulation of information
    critical
  • Associated with frontal lobes, frontal systems

53
Neuropsychological tests of executive function
  • Newer, less uniformity in use than in other
    domains.
  • Trail Making Test, Wisconsin Card Sorting test
  • Fluency Controlled Oral Word Association Tests,
    Design Fluency
  • Tests of working memory
  • Digit span
  • Sequence reversal, sequence alternation

54
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56
A chronic disease model of dementia
latent phase preclinical phase
clinical phase
symptoms
diagnosis
Initiation Factors genetics
environment life style
  • Promoting Factors
  • Age related change
  • vascular risk factors?
  • head trauma?
  • hypoxia?
  • stress, depression?

death
After R. Katzman, 1993
57
Risk of Alzheimers disease goes down as amount
of education goes up
58
Higher initial capacity or cognitive reservemay
delay clinical onset of dementia
functional impairment

59
Thinking activities during adulthood correlates
with lowered risk of dementia
A 1 point increase in cognitive activity reduced
the risk of dementia 7
Verghese, et al. (2003). NEJM, 3482508
60
APOE4 increases the risk of Alzheimers disease
and lowers the age of onset

84
20
no e4's
18
Relative risk of AD
82
16
80
age at onset
14
one e4
78
12
76
10
8
two e4's
74
6
72
4
70
2
68
0
e3/e3
e2/e2
e2/e3
e2/e4
e3/e4
e4/e4
data from Tsai, et. al., 1994
61
Volume of Cortical Gray Matter by Group
62
Seeing the pathology of Alzheimers disease in
the brain during life
C
A
B
Images courtesy of Dr. William Jagust, UC
Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
63
Current Drug Therapies for AD
  • Treatments for symptoms
  • Drugs that increase acetylcholine levels
  • Cognex (Tacrine)
  • Aricept (Donepezil)
  • Exelon (Rivastigmine)
  • Razadyne (Reminyl) (Galantamine)
  • NMDA Receptor Blocker
  • Memantine (Namenda)
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