Title: Identifying and Understanding the Neuropsychological Symptoms of Dementia
1Identifying and Understanding the
Neuropsychological Symptoms of Dementia
Woman driving with door open
- Dr. Christine Cauffield
- Cauffield Associates, LLC
- drcauffield_at_aol.com
2Key Symptoms of Cognitive Impairment
- Memory Loss
- Language Disturbance
- Decline in Judgment and Reasoning
- Personality Change
3Brief Look at Human Brain
4Brief Look at Human Brain
- Frontal Lobe - Executive Functioning
- The Frontal Lobe controls abstract reasoning,
planning, judgment, evaluation, volition, control
of complex movement, expressive language (speech
and writing), goal-directedness of actions,
flexibility in thinking and behavior, and social
appropriateness. One third of human brain
volume. -
5Brief Look at Human Brain
- Temporal Lobe-Emotion
- The Temporal Lobe controls hearing and
higher-order auditory processing, oral language
comprehension (left hemisphere), musical
appreciation (right hemisphere), verbal memory
(left hemisphere), and visuo-spatial memory
(right hemisphere), emotional experience and
expression.
6Brief Look at Human Brain
- Parietal Lobe-Sensory
- Appreciation of bodily sensation, sensory-motor
integration, body image, arithmetic (left
hemisphere) and spatial (right hemisphere)
reasoning, integration and interpretation of
input from the different senses. - Occipital Lobe-Vision
- Vision and higher-order visual processing,
reading (left hemisphere), recognition of faces
(right hemisphere).
7Brief Look at Human Brain
- Left Hemisphere - Language
- Depressive, dysphoric emotional syndromes
- Verbal, analytic, and mathematical functions
- Right Hemisphere
- More manic-euphoric, increased unawareness and
denial of disability - Visuo-spatial, musical, some forms of emotional
functioning
8Symptoms of Cognitive Deficits
- Impairments include the following
- Sensation
- Perception
- Attention
- Concentration
- Language
- Memory
- Visuospatial Integration
- Thinking and Planning
9Symptoms of Cognitive Deficits
- Patients perform better with tasks and situations
- that are familiar rather than new, structured vs.
- open-ended, and specific vs. ambiguous.
10Common Neuropsychological Conditions
- Aphasia - Deficits in speaking, writing, reading
or understanding speech of others - Aprosodias - Deficits in expressing emotional
tone of communication - Apraxias - Higher-order disorders of coordination
and motor planning (gait disturbances)
11Common Neuropsychological Conditions
- Agnosias - Deficits in recognizing or discerning
the meaning of sounds, sights, objects, or people
- Retrograde Amnesia Loss of memory for events
immediately preceding the trauma/insult - Anterograde Amnesia - Disturbance in forming new
memories after the trauma/insult
12Dementia
- There are over 30 types of dementia and many
- follow different courses of progression and/or
- recovery, depending on type and location of brain
- insult.
13Dementia
- Common Dementias include
- Vascular Dementia
- Alzheimer's Disease
- Korsakoff Syndrome
- Additionally, dementia is often a concomitant
- condition with many medical conditions, including
- Parkinson's Disease, Multiple Sclerosis, Brain
- Tumors and Open and Closed-Head Injuries.
14Dementia
- Clinical Presentations
- Frontal Lobe Disinhibition
- Emotional Dysregulation
- Incontinence
- Latency
- Anomia
- Transient Ischemic Attack-symptom reports
- Sense of smell/taste
- La Belle Indifference
- Denial/Lack of Insight
- Hypersexuality
- Depression
- Fatigue
- Attention, judgment, reasoning
- Right side/Left side deficits
- Obsessive-Compulsive behaviors
- Perseveration
- Confabulation
Variations of clinical presentation will occur,
based on type and location of insult/injury, as
well as pre-existing cognitive and personality
traits.
15Key Clinical Assessment QuestionsIt is
important to determine history of the following
- Surgeries-Anoxia
- Substance use/abuse-alcohol and illicit
- Recreational accidents-skiing, diving, etc.
- Depression
- Trauma-link to neurobiological and
endocrinological changes in brain
- Coma, loss of consciousness-duration, treatment
received, date(s) - Falls
- Automobile accidents
- Sports accidents-football, soccer, boxing, etc.
- Family violence
- Domestic violence
-
16Community Referral Sources
- Neuropsychologist for accurate assessment and
diagnosis - Psychiatrist
- Geriatrician
- Neurologist
- Senior Centers, Alzheimer's Resource Centers, and
other Community resources - Memory Disorder Clinics
- Cognitive Rehabilitation Centers
- Other required specialists - Family therapists,
etc.
17Treatment Options
- Psychotherapeutic and rehabilitation efforts
- that address
- Cognition
- Emotion
- Behavior
- .
18Treatment Options
- Cognitive Rehabilitation - trains patient to use
intact - Cognitive modalities to compensate for impaired
- functions
- Visuospatial impairment-patient taught verbal
strategies - Memory impairment-structured activities
hierarchically so each event is cue for next - Challenging behaviors-psychopharmacology and
psychotherapy when appropriate - .
19Family/Caregiver Stress
- 23, or 22.4 million households, are involved in
caregiving to persons aged 50 or over. - More than one quarter (26.6) of the adult
population has provided care for a chronically
ill, disabled, or aged family member or friend
during the past year. - Approximately 75 of those providing care to
older family members and friends are female
most likely a daughter.
20Family/Caregiver Stress
- An average of 18 to 20 hours per week is spent by
caregivers providing care to older adults. - Caregivers spend an average of 4.5 years
providing care. - 46 59 of caregivers are clinically depressed.
21Family/Caregiver Stress
- Caregivers use prescription drugs for depression,
anxiety, and insomnia 2 to 3 times more than the
general population - The average age of caregivers is 60 with a range
of ages 19 to 98. - Of those working, 18 quit their jobs and another
42 reduced their work hours.
22Identifying and Understanding the
Neuropsychological Symptoms of DementiaPresented
by Dr. Christine Cauffield August 16,
2010Case Study
- Mr. Brown, a 78 year old male, resides in a
VA nursing home. He was married 48 years, and
his wife died of breast cancer 10 years ago. She
suffered for 3 years, and Mr. Brown was the
primary caretaker prior to her death. His
daughters, age 45 and 47, report that their
parents had a loving and devoted relationship,
with no history of domestic or family violence.
Mr. Brown was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
first born of three siblings. He completed a 4
year college degree in finance, and served 3
years in the Korean war, where he saw active
combat. Upon his return, he was employed as a
chief accountant for Exxon Corporation, and
received numerous promotions. After a 40 year
career with Exxon, he retired at age 65. His
health issues include high blood pressure,
diabetes, memory loss and depression. A CT scan
in 2007 revealed evidence of cva in temporal lobe
region. His daughters were no longer able to care
for Mr. Brown, and he was placed in the nursing
home in 2007. They visit regularly, as do
extended family members.
23Identifying and Understanding the
Neuropsychological Symptoms of DementiaPresented
by Dr. Christine Cauffield August 16,
2010Case Study Contd.
-
- The Nursing Director on the unit has
reported that Mr. Brown has been inappropriately
touching other residents genital areas, and has
been fondling himself. She reports that Mr.
Brown has frequent angry outbursts, and "cries at
the drop of a hat." She states that he is a
"dirty old man" and has removed him from all
social areas, including the dining room to
"protect the other residents". You have been
requested to evaluate Mr. Brown, as the daughters
have threatened to sue the nursing home due to
their displeasure with the Nursing
Director.What other information would you
gather?What tests, if any, would you order?What
is your initial hypothesis regarding his
presenting problems?What clinical interventions
would you recommend?Other thoughts, comments?
24 Identifying and Understanding the
Neuropsychological Symptoms of Dementia
Resources www.medicinenet.com
25Identifying and Understanding the
Neuropsychological Symptoms of Dementia
26A Brief Look at Head Trauma
- Head Trauma-Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) most
common cause of brain damage - Modern medical techniques saving many accident
victims who 10-20 years ago would have succumbed - Falls Most common cause of head injuries
incurred by infants and young children and by
persons age 64 and older - Accidents involving motor vehicles account for
approximately half of all head injuries in the
other age groups - Except over age 75 age group, males sustain
injuries twice as frequently as women -
27A Brief Look at Head Trauma
- Additional risks factors for falls and assaults
- Lower SES
- Unemployment
- Lower educational levels
28A Brief Look at Head Trauma
- Assaults accounts for 25-40 of brain injuries
and include - Blows to head
- Penetrating weapons
- Sports/recreational activities
- On the job injuries
- Closed Head Injury
- Majority of head trauma
- Skull remains intact and brain is not exposed
- Open Head Injury-Skull is penetrated
29A Brief Look at Head Trauma
- Behavioral Effects dependent on
- Severity of injury
- Site of lesions
- Premorbid personality
30A Brief Look at Head Trauma
- How injury occurred (MVA, blow to head, missile)
- Severity
- Site of focal damage
31A Brief Look at Head Trauma
- Risk Factors
- Coma Duration Poor Predictor for many patients
with brief coma period (20-30 minutes) but good
predictor for more severe injuries - Internal bleeding (2 or more days later)
- Delayed trauma including intracerebral hematoma
(DTICH)
32A Brief Look at Head Trauma
- Glascow Coma Scale (GCS) Classification system
that measures presence, degree and duration of
coma. - Patients with left lateralized penetrating wounds
to brain more likely to suffer LOC than those
with injuries on right side - Duration shorter for those with right sided
lesions - Alcohol intoxication can lower Glascow Coma Score
33A Brief Look at Head Trauma
- Penetrating/Open Head Injuries
- Amount of damage determined by amount of energy
translated to the brain- Clean Wounds - Significant tissue damage tends to be
concentrated in path of intruding object - Surgical cleansing of wound (debridement)
typically removes damaged tissue along with
debris. - Most of brain remains in tact
- Circumscribed focal lesion usually produces
relatively circumscribed predictable cognitive
losses.
34A Brief Look at Head Trauma
- Penetrating Object can also cause diffuse damage
as a result of - Shock waves and pressure effects
- Extent and severity depend on physical affects
such as speed, wobble and malleability of the
penetrating object - Low velocity considered under 1000ft/sec typical
of civilian bullets and older military missiles - More extensive damage results in hemorrhages,
ischemia (absence of normal blood flow in
effected area), edema (tissue swelling) - Extensive damage and velocity of penetrating
objects exceeds 1,000ft/sec as in modern weaponry
35A Brief Look at Head Trauma
- Closed Head Injury Brain damage occurs in 2
stages - Primary Injury-damage occurs at time of impact
- Second Injury-effects of the physiological
processes set in motion by primary injury
36A Brief Look at Head Trauma
- Primary Injury Common Symptom Patterns
- Static Injury Relatively still victim receives
blow to head - Point of impact (Coup) followed by rebound
effects (Countrecoup) - Brain sustains bruise or contusion in area
opposite blow - Coup and Contrecoup lesions account for specific
and localized behavior changes that accompany
closed head injuries
37A Brief Look at Head Trauma
- Whiplash Acceleration/Deceleration forces
resulting in rapid flexion-extension movement of
the neck - Effects of acceleration/deceleration is called
concussion-does not require direct impact to head - Hemorrhages create hemotomas-swellings filled
with blood within the skull
38A Brief Look at Head Trauma
- Secondary Injury May be as destructive if not
more, of brain tissue as the accident's immediate
effects - Most prominent processes are
- Hemorrhages
- Tissue Swelling
- Alterations in blood volume and blood flow
39A Brief Look at Head Trauma
- The collection of edema (collection of fluid in
and around damaged tissue) produces increased
intracranial pressure (ICP) which produces
swelling. - Swelling compounds whatever damage has taken
place to brain tissue - Heightened ICP is most frequent cause of death in
closed head injuries - ICP tends to be strong predictor of severe
chronic impairment - Control of intracranial pressure is the most
important medical consideration in the acute care
of head trauma
40A Brief Look at Head Trauma
- Additional Risk Factors
- A single traumatic injury to the brain doubles
risk for future head injury - Two brain injuries raises risk eightfold
- Contact sports-high risk- soccer, boxing,
football - Pre-injury alcohol abuse-poorer outcomes for
recovery
41A Brief Look at Head Trauma
- Case Study Mike S.
- Mike is a 28 year old male who was struck by
lightening and fell from a work station eight
feet above ground, striking the left side of his
head. His neuropsychological test results
displayed only mild language deficits and all
aspects of response speed, motor control, and
attention, concentration, and mental tracking
were above average. - However, he could no longer perform complex
mechanical construction work and he failed on an
aptitude test of visuographic functions and had
difficulty with block and puzzle construction.
His wife complained that he had become
insensitive to her emotional states as well as
socially inappropriate. - Based on this information, what does this pattern
suggest?
42A Brief Look at Head Trauma
- Presented by
- Dr. Christine Cauffield
- President and CEO
- Cauffield and Associates, LLC.
- For a copy of this presentation
- Email drcauffield_at_aol.com