Title: Keys to Care
1(No Transcript)
2(No Transcript)
3(No Transcript)
4(No Transcript)
5Artistic Regression
- Distortion comic-grotesque representation
Condensation filling to overflowing - Transformation (neomorphism) anatomic changes
and strange facial features (physiognomy) - Stereotype ornamental stereotype and
repetition of particular motives - Woodenness geometrical and diagrammatic design
and pictures enclosed with a frame, lack of depth
(lack of shading) and lack of movement (wooden
rigidity) - Disintegration neglect of spacial
relationships between objects and loosening of
physiognomy of human beings and animals. - Regression relapse into primitive or child-like
drawings and lack of perspective - Maurer K, Frolich L, ALZHEIMER INSIGHTS Paintings
of and Artist With Alzheimer Disease
6Clock Drawing
7Life expectancy with Dementia
- 3.3 years, comparable to some malignancies
- In patients diagnosed with dementia
- Wolfson et al NEJM 20013441111-1116
8Alzheimer Brain Atrophy
From Whole Brain Atlas
9Neurodegenerative Diseases and Prions Stanley B.
Prusiner, M.D. Twenty-five years ago, little was
known about the causes of neurodegenerative
diseases.
10Stanley Prusiner Nobel 1997
11Thesis
- Degenerative Disease is caused by the
accumulation of toxic substances - Deranged metabolism over long pds of time.
- Primarily diseases of elderly
- As in cholesterol and homocysteine in
atherosclerosis
12Neurologic Diseases attributed to Protein
deposition
- Alzheimer disease Aß42
- Amyloid Angiopathy Aß42
- Huntington Disease Huntingtin
- Prion Disease PrP sc
- Tauopathies Picks, FT dementia, PSP
- Parkinson Disease, Lewy body Dementia (alpha
synuclein) - Spino-cerebellar Degenerations Ataxins
- ALS Neurofilament
- Macular Degeneration A2E
13Macular DegenerationAge Related Maculopathy
- 5 of 60 year olds, 20 of 80 year olds
- Disorder of Phagocytosing cells in Retinal
Pigment epithelium - Accumulation of drusen or lipofuscin in Retinal
Pigment Epithelium - Genetic forms may be A2E accumulation
- Retinal Alzheimers Disease
14Macular Degeneration
15Pathogenesis of Macular Degeneration
from Scientific American 10/2001
16First Hints to Causation
- Genetics
- Familial Alzheimer Disease
- Trisomy 21
17Alzheimer Genes Chromosome s
- 21 Abn APP Gene lt5
- 14 Presenilin 1 18-50
- 1 Presenilin 2
lt1 - 19APOE-epsilon 4 Incr risk in Caucasions
- 19APOE-epsilon2 on Chr 19 decr risk
- of early-onset Disease
18Apolipoprotein E4
- Variant alleles E2,E3
- Variants differ by only 1 amino acid
- E4 is present in 64 of late-onset Alz patients
as 34 of unaffected controls - 2 copies (homozygote) of E4 increases risk of Alz
from 45 to 91
19All have in Common
- Increased Accumulation of b Amyloid
- Abnormal Accumulation
- Defective Degradation
20Alzheimer Disease
21The Amyloid Hypothesis
22Pathogenesis
- Beta-Amyloid Accumulation
- Decrease in Acetylcholine, AchE
- Injury
- Free-Radical Formation
- Genetics
- Polygenic
- ApoE4
- FAD
23Characteristic Changes
- Pathology
- Tangles, plaques, Granulo-vacuolar degeneration,
Atrophy,neuronal loss - Biochemistry
- Decreased Ach, AchE
- Imaging
- Atrophy
- Decreased metab activity in postr cerebral
association Cortices
24Senile Plaque
- A hallmark pathologic lesion specific for AD is
senile plaque. Plaques are composed of
amyloid-beta (A-beta), which is found in soluble
form in the body fluids of patients with AD.
Initially, A-beta aggregates into diffuse plaques
that lack definite borders. Later, it matures
into compact plaques formed of A-beta fibrils
that may be toxic to surrounding neurons.
25Amyloid Plaques
- Between Cells (extra-cellular)
- Appear before Tangles do
- Associated with Microglia (inflammation)
- (microglia are phagocytes of the brain)
26Amyloid Precursor Protein
- 695-770 Amino Acids
- Transmembrane protein
- Beta-Amyloid is snipped out precursor protein
- Beta-Amyloid- transmembrane component
27Cast of Characters
- Amyloid Precursor Protein (APP)
- Secretases alpha, beta, Gamma
- Enzymes that cut up Amyloid Precursor Protein
- Beta-Amyloid (or Aß42)
- Beta-Amyloid is the villain
- Setting The neuron cell membrane
28Secretase Steps
- Alpha then Gamma OK
- Beta then Gamma yields Beta Amyloid
- 40 Amino Acid fragment is OK but minority cut
into toxic 42 Amino acid fragment which
constitutes plaque (Aß42)
29Presenilins
- Early Onset Alzheimer's
- Trans-membrane Protein Cleavers
- PreI Chr 14, PreIIChr 1
- Knockout for these proteins No Beta Amyloid
- Forms of Gamma-Secretase??
30Are Pre-Senilins forms of Secretase??
31(No Transcript)
32Amyloid Plaque
33Pathogenesis of Senile Plaque
- Toxic Beta Amyloid fragments build up outside the
cell - E4 may be selectively removed from the
extracellular space in place of beta-amyloid - Beta-Amyloid is toxic and leads to other pathology
34(No Transcript)
35Cutting ß-Amyloid Precursor Protein
- Alpha and Gamma Secretase give rise to harmless
p3 protein - Beta then Gamma secretase yield either
- Harmless 40 amino acid residue of Beta-Amyloid
OR - Toxic 42 Amino Acid residue of Beta Amyloid
36(No Transcript)
37Gamma Secretase a trans-membrane protease
38Beta Amyloid Mediated Damage
- Ca Deregulation
- Creation of Free Radicals
- Immune Aggregation
39Beta Amyloid
- 4.2 kD fragment, 42-43
- Abnormal cleavage of Beta Amyloid precursor
protein (APP) - APP part of family of 70kD transmembrane proteins
- Beta-Secretase, APP cleaving Protein
- Injury, ischemia incr APP
- Amyloid is neurotoxic
40Mechanism of Amyloid destruction
- Liberating Calcium in Cells
- Damaging Mitochondria
- Enhancing inflammatory (Microglial) Response
41New Strategies
- Beta-Amyloid Vaccine
- Beta and Gamma Secretase Blockers
- Zinc and Copper Chelators
42Strategies to Prevent and treat Alzheimers
- 1. Inhibition of the proteases (enzymes) that
produce Aß42 2. Inhibition of Aß42
aggregation that precedes A deposition 3.
Inhibition of Aß42 -induced neurotoxicity - Vaccine or antibody to Aß42
43Dennis Selkoe Howard Weiner
44Mouse Trials of Vaccine
- Nasal Administration
- Genetically affected mice make excessive Beta
Amyloid - Mice show evidence of Dementia
- 50 reduction in plaque formation
- Improvement on tests
- Human phase II trials begin this year
45Elan Pharmaceutical trial
- In PDAPP mouse (a genetically engineered mouse
model with Alzheimers-like pathology) - AN-1792, both reduces pre-existing deposits of
amyloid and inhibits accumulation
46Gene linkage
- Long arm of Chromosome 10 in late onset Alzheimer
- ?Connected with degradation of Beta Amyloid?
- Insulin processing protein
- Rudy Tanzi Dec22,2000 Science
47Treatment Cornerstones
- Cholinesterase Inhibitors
- Ancillary Symptoms
- Anxiety
- Agitation
- Disorientation and Wandering
- Sleep Disturbance
- Placement
- Caring for Caretaker
48(No Transcript)
49Other Pathology
50CSF in Alzheimers Disease
- They found levels of CSF beta-amyloid protein
were significantly lower, onaverage, in people
with Alzheimer's disease than the comparison
group (183pg/mL vs. 491 pg/mL). In addition,
levels of CSF tau protein weresignificantly
higher in Alzheimer's disease patients than in
the others (587pg/mL vs. 244 pg/mL).
51Diagnosis Criteria
- Alzheimer's disease is characterized by
progressive decline and ultimatelyloss of
multiple cognitive functions, including both
Memory impairment--impaired ability to learn new
information or torecall previously learned
information. And at least one of the
followingLoss of word comprehension ability,
for example, inability to respond to"Your
daughter is on the phone." (aphasia)Loss of
ability to perform complex tasks involving muscle
coordination,for example, bathing or dressing
(apraxia)Loss of ability to recognize and use
familiar objects, for example,clothing
(agnosia)Loss of ability to plan, organize, and
execute normal activities, forexample, going
shopping.B. The problems in "A" represent a
substantial decline from previous abilitiesand
cause significant problems in everyday
functioning.C. The problems in "A" begin slowly
and gradually become more severe.D. The
problems in "A" are not due to Other
conditions that cause progressive cognitive
decline, among themstroke, Parkinson's disease,
Huntington's chorea, brain tumor, etc. Other
conditions that cause dementia, among them
hypothyroidism, HIVinfection, syphilis, and
deficiencies in niacin, vitamin B12, and folic
acid.E. The problems in "A" are not caused by
episodes of delirium.F. The problems in "A" are
not caused by another mental illness
depression,schizophrenia, etc.
52Granulo-vacuolar Degeneration
53Granulo-vacuolar degeneration
- 5 m clear intracytoplasmic vacuole
- Argyrophillic core
- Pyramidal cell region of hippocampus
54Neurofibrillary Tangles
55Neurofibrillary Tangles
56Neurofibrillary Tangle
57Neurofibrillary Tangles
- Paired Helical Filaments associated with Tau
which binds to microtubules - Phosphorylation of Tau inhibits its ability to
stabilize microtubules - Leads to microtubule agglomeration as PHF
- Test for Tau in CSF
58Neurofibrillary Tangle
- Tau protein Assd with microtubules
- Correlates more with degree of dementia
- Appear after than Senile plaque
- Not Specific for Alzheimer Disease
59Neurofibrillary Tangle
- Abnormal intracellular structure caused by
phosphorylation of the tau protein in the
cytoskeleton of the neuron. - Microglial cell proliferation, especially in
association with senile plaques, suggests
inflammatory processes play a role in the disease
process.
60Fuel and Longevity
- Daf-2 gene in C. elegans
- When not functioning lifespan increases from 10
to 30 days - An insulin receptor gene in humans
- Rat experiments with caloric reduction
- Monkey and human receptors
- Gary Ruvkun, Harvard Medl School
61Causes of Dementia
- Alzheimer 55
- Vascular - 20
- Lewy Body 15
- Picks and lobar atrophy 5
- Other 5
- Small,GW et al JAMA 1997,2781363-71, APA, Am J
Psychiatry 1997,154 (suppl)1-39 - Morris JC Clin GeriatrMed. 1994,10257-76
62Multi-infarct dementia
Whole brain Atlas
63Hachinski Score for Dx of Vascular Dementia
- Abrupt onset
- Stepwise deterioration
- Fluctuating course improvement between
strokes - Relative preservation of personality
- Nocturnal confusion
- Depression
64Hachinski Score (contd)
- Somatic complaints
- Emotional incontinence
- History of hypertension
- Evidence of atherosclerosis
- Pvd, MI
- Focal Neurological symptoms (TIA) Focal
neurological signs
65Vascular Dementia
- CT or MRI critical
- Either large volume of brain affected, preferably
in both hemispheres or multi-infarcts in
strategic locations - Small Vessel
- Lacunar State, deep strokes
- Subcortical deficits
- Multiple Cortical Infarctsaphasia, agnosia,
apraxia
66Behavior contd
- Wandering
- can be dangerous, medications not effective
- provide a "sheltered freedom". Example Cover
door knob with shoe boxes. - Screaming
- very disturbing, may be related to pain, delusion
or Neuroleptic induced akathisia. ? background
music may be helpful. Sleep disruption
Sundowning very common
67Agitation and Dementia
- Structure and routine.
- Follow regular, predictable routines.
- Keep things simple.
- Distract.
68Behavior
- Why is depression relatively uncommon??
- Anosognosia for dementia
69Simple and Active
- Break down complex tasks into many small, simple
steps that the person can handle Folding towels
while one is doing the laundry. Allow time for
frequent rests. Redirect. Get the person to do
something else as a substitute. A person who is
restless and fidgety can be asked to sweep, dust,
rake, fold clothes, or take a walk or a car ride
with the caregiver. - Repetitive simple movement
70Distract
- Offer a snack Put on a favorite videotape or some
familiar music Be flexible. Know when to back
away from a task- a bath or dressing and
reapproach later Soothe. When agitated, do
simple, repetitive activities such as massage,
hair brushing, or giving a manicure. Reassure.
Let the person know that you are there and will
keep him or her safe.
71Sleep and Anxiety
- Nonpharmacologic Daytime stimulation, adequate
supervision, avoidance of napping. - Neuroleptics may be helpful for delusion and
agitation. 20 may get worse.
72Preventing Alzheimer Disease
73Alzheimers Burden
- 4 Million Americans
- 14 Million Projected by 2050
- 1/10 over 65
- 85 one of three has AD
- Life expect 8 years
- in U.S .110 B. in yr 2000
- Half of all NH patients
- 12500-70000/person year, avg lifetime
cost174000
74Alzheimers Burden (contd)
- Prevalence doubles every 5 years after 65
- 360,000 new cases/yr
- Higher in non-Caucasians whose numbers are
growing in population - 65 now 13 but will reach 18 by 2025
- Sltly more than 50 receive care at home
75Neurological Diseases
- Alzheimers 4 Million
110 Bn - Affective Disorders 17 Million 44Bn
- Drug etoh 15Million
240Bn - Intractable Pain
65 Bn - Parkinsons 500,000
5.6Bn - Schizophrenia 2 Million
30Bn - Stroke 700,000/yr
30Bn - MS 350,000
- SourceJAMA 285594(2001)
76Neurological Disease(Prevalence)
- Alzheimer Disease 4 million
- Stroke 3-4 Million
- Traumatic Brain Inj 2.5-3.7 Million
- Epilepsy 1.75 Million
- Parkinsons 1.5 Million
77Future Burden
- 2011 first baby boomers turn 65
- 18 of population by 2025
- 85 now 4 million, 8.5 million by 2030
- 50 of Alz pts are at home, 50 in care
78Risks
- Advanced Age
- Half of those gt85 1/10 of those gt65
- Female Sex
- Mild Cognitive Impairment
- Head Injury
- APOE4
- Family History
- Low Education
- Downs
- ?Race
- ?Homocysteine?
79Estrogen
- 2/3 of Alzheimer Patients are women
- Onset After Menopause
- May increase cholinergic transmission
- Neurotrophic effects
- Anti-amyloidogenic properties
- Association with Neurotrophins
- Regulates synapse formation in hippocampus
80Estrogen
- 3 studies in Neurology 200054 show no effect in
women already Diagnosed - Baltimore Long. Study After adjusting for
education, the relative risk for AD in ERT users
as compared with nonusers was 0.46 - Tang MX et al. Effect of estrogen during
menopause on risk and age at onset of Alzheimer's
disease. Lancet 1996348429-432 - Jury Still Out
- Prospective treatment trials
81Estrogen Reviews
- NEJM 3441242-1244 April 19, 2001 Number 16
Richard Mayeux - Neurology 2000542035-2037 Marder and Sano
82Womens Health Initiative Memory Study (WHIMS)
- In May 2003, scientists taking part in the
Women's Health Initiative Memory Study (WHIMS),
part of the Women's Health Initiative, reported
new health risks for women over age 65 using a
type of combined estrogen plus progestin known as
Prempro. - The WHIMS scientists found that the number of
women over age 65 who began having symptoms of
dementia while using this form of estrogen plus
progestin was twice as high as those not taking
any hormones.
83Homocysteine
- Eight years
- RR 1.4 for each increase of 1 SD in the
log-transformed homocysteine value either at base
line or eight years earlier - RR of Alzheimer's disease was 1.8 per increase of
1 SD at base line - RR1.6 per increase of 1 SD eight years before
base line. - Plasma homocysteine level greater than 14 µmol
per liter doubled the risk of Alzheimer's
disease. - Seshadri et al. N Engl J Med 346476-483 February
14, 2002
84NSAIDs
- Prospective, population-based cohort study of
6989 subjects 55 years of age or older who were
free of dementia at base line. - Relative risk of Alzheimer's disease was 0.95 in
subjects with short-term use of NSAIDs - RR 0.83 with intermediate-term use
- RR 0.20 wit long-term use.
- Risk did not vary according to age
- Use of NSAIDs was not associated with a reduction
in the risk of vascular dementia. - Bas A. in 't Veld, N Engl J Med 2001
3451515-1521, Nov 22, 2001
85Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging
- Relative risk of Alzheimer's disease of 0.50
among regular users of NSAIDs, as compared with
nonusers - Stewart et al Neurology 199748626-632
86Alzheimer Genes
- 21 Abn APP Gene
- 14 Presenilin 1
- 1 Presenilin 2
- 19APOE-epsilon 4 Incr risk in Caucasions
- 19APOE-epsilon2 on Chr 19 decr risk
87Late Stage
- Mixes up past and present
- Expressive and receptive aphasia
- Misidentifies familiar persons and places
- Parkinsonism and falls risk
- More mood and behavioral disturbances
- Needs help with all ADLs, Incontinent
88Ongoing Studies From May 16, 2002 ELEENA DE
LISSER, The Wall Street Journal
PATHWAYS TO PREVENTION?
Ongoing clinical trials related to
Alzheimeraposs disease and possible modes of
prevention
89ADAPT
- Alzheimer Disease Anti inflammatory Prevention
Trial - Use celecoxib or naproxen for years
- Evaluation at Center
- 3 X first year
- 2 X per year after that
- Phone follow up
90Prevent AD with Estrogen
- National Institute on Aging
- Mary Sano, PhD
- 5 year study
91Strategies
- Vitamin E and Selegeline or donepezil
- Estrogens
- NSAIDs
- B12,B6,Folate (homocysteine)
- Statins
- Valproate ?Neuroprotective
- IPA (Indole-3-Propionic Acid) anti-oxidant
92Homocysteine
- Does this mean that lowering H. levels will
prevent As Disease? - No one knows
93Homocysteine
- 50 Mg pyridoxine
- Up to 4 mg. of Folate
- 500 mcg of B12
94NSAIDs
- Inflammation is part of Aß Accumulation
- Longitudinal Studies show dose related effect of
NSAIDs - Nature Nov. 8, 2001 NSAIDs directly decrease
deposition of Aß42 - ASA,Celebrex, Naprosyn no effect
- Others at very high doses decreased production in
cells up to 80
95Selegiline and Vitamin E
- 2000 Units of Vitamin E and 10 mg. Selegiline
- S. -4 month delay in disease progression e.g. to
NH placement - E. 6 month delay in Disease progression
- No difference on cognitive scores
- Combined treatment did slightly worse than either
treatment alone - Sano et al. N Engl J Med 19973361216-1222
96Gingko Biloba
- 1 year
- 120 mg.
- 2.4 decrease in Alzheimers disease Assessment
scale Cognitive subscale - Very little other evidence
- Le Bars PL et al.JAMA 19972781327-1332
97Alzheimer Disease
- Dissolution of the Personality
- Inexorable Progression
98Keys of Therapy
- Early Recognition of Disease
- Cholinesterase Blockers
- Treatment of Ancillary Symptoms
- Maintaining Patient in own Environment
- Family Support
99Diagnosis
- Index of Suspicion
- Age!
- Sensitivity to Patients and Family
100Vigilance
- Now Important because there are now early
treatments that help.
101 10 Warning Signs
- Dysfunction on Job
- Problem with Language function
- Difficulty performing Familiar Tasks
- Disorientation
- Poor Judgment
- Altered Abstract thinking
102More Signs
- Misplacing Objects
- Personality Change
- Altered Mood and Behavior
- Loss of initiative
103Diagnostic Criteria for Dementia
- Multiple Cognitive Deficits with Both
- Memory Impairment plus one or more of follg
- Aphasia, Apraxia, Agnosia, Executive function
- Impaired abstraction, judgement
- Impaired Social or Occupational Function
- DSM IV (1994), 133-35
104Diagnostic Criteria (cont)
- Cognitive Deficits are not due to other processes
incl - Substances
- Systemic processes
- Delirium and acute conditions
- Not better accounted for by another Axis I
disorder
105Diagnosis Keys
- Not patient, but Persons Other than patient
complain of decreased cognitive function. - Backing away from or ceasing to participate in
previous hobbies and activities - Take spouse, signif other, employer reports
seriously!!
106Alzheimer Dementia
- Often anosognosia unawareness of problem on
part of sufferer - Also denial
107Pseudo-Dementia
- Often patient will themselves complain of memory
loss - Younger patient
- Memory problem complained of
- Spouse and co-worker find no problem
- Pre-occupation
- Anxiety is the enemy of recall
108Pseudo-Dementia
- Some sharp or compulsive persons notice a normal
slipping with age - Ready recall
- Word-finding
- Again, no complaints from others
- Difficult distinction
- May require psychometrics to distinguish
109Pseudo-Dementia
- Associated with severe depression
- Lack of reactivity psychomotor retardation
- More abrupt onset
- Some old folks have combined organic dementia and
severe depression
110MCI
- 6-25 progress to Alzheimers disease per year.
111Stages Mild
- Routine loss of recent memory
- Mild aphasia or word-finding difficulty
- Seeks familiar and avoids unfamiliar places
- Some difficulty writing and using objects
- Apathy and depression
- Needs reminders for some ADLs
112Stages Moderate
- Chronic loss of recent memory
- Moderate Aphasia
- Gets lost at times even inside home
- Repetitive actions, apraxia
- Possible mood and behavioral disturbances
- Needs reminders and help with most ADLs
113Evaluation
- Thorough Hx/Pex
- Mental Function Evaluation
- CBC, Chems, RPR, LFTs,Thyroid, B12
- HIV testing in selected cases
- Imaging (CT, MRI) in most cases
- Neuropsych testing if dx is uncertain
- LP in doubtful cases
- Tau and amyloid beta
- Apolipoprotein genotype??
114Evaluation compare betw visits
- Folstein Mini-Mental Status
- Clock-drawing
- Scale of level of Function as reported by family
member - Language function
115Rule Out
- Alcohol
- Depression
- Drug s
- Metabolic Derangement
- Nutritional Deficiencies
- Infection
116Causes of Dementia
- Alzheimer 55
- Vascular - 20
- Lewy Body 15
- Picks and lobar atrophy 5
- Other 5
- Small,GW et al JAMA 1997,2781363-71, APA, Am J
Psychiatry 1997,154 (suppl)1-39 - Morris JC Clin GeriatrMed. 1994,10257-76
117Hachinski Score for Dx of Vascular Dementia
- Abrupt onset
- Stepwise deterioration
- Fluctuating course improvement between
strokes - Relative preservation of personality
- Nocturnal confusion
- Depression
118Hachinski Score (contd)
- Somatic complaints
- Emotional incontinence
- History of hypertension
- Evidence of atherosclerosis
- Pvd, MI
- Focal Neurological symptoms (TIA) Focal
neurological signs
119Vascular Dementia
- CT or MRI critical
- Either large volume of brain affected, preferably
in both hemispheres or multi-infarcts in
strategic locations - Small Vessel
- Lacunar State, deep strokes
- Subcortical deficits
- Multiple Cortical Infarctsaphasia, agnosia,
apraxia
120Picks Lobar atrophy
- Behavioral disturbances precede dementia
- Disinhibition
- Exaggeration of previous eccentricities
- Exhibitionism and overt sexuality
- Inappropriate humor, loss of social skills
- Ethnic jokes
- Slovenly behavior, decr hygiene and cleanliness
- Distractibility and impersistence
- Language dysfxn rather than memory
121Picks
- Fronto-temporal atrophy on imaging or SPECT or
PET scans show decr metabolism - Tau opathy
- Grouped with PSP etc
- May be familial
122Others
- Creutzfeldt-Jakob
- Cortico-Basal Degen
- Progressive Supranuclear Palsy
- Frontal Lobe Dementia
123Parkinson Related Dementia
- Late consequence of Parkinson Disease
- Hallucination prominent
- Dopaminergic Meds, anticholinergics are
hallucinogenic - Parkinson and age related perceptual changes
124Parkinsons and Dementia
- Diffuse Lewy Body Disease
- Alzheimer changes in the aged
- Parkinson-dementia complex
- Parkinson related diseases
- Anti-esterases seem effective here too
125Treatment Cornerstones
- Cholinesterase Inhibitors
- Ancillary Symptoms
- Anxiety
- Agitation
- Disorientation and Wandering
- Sleep Disturbance
- Placement
- Caring for Caretaker
126(No Transcript)
127Cholinergic hypothesis
- Diffusely projecting area Nucleus Basalis of
Meynert - Layers I and II major cholinergic cortical
innervation - Amygdala and hippocampus lgest innervation
128AChE inhibitors
- Establish a diagnosis of probable AD.
- Determine the stage of the patient (AChE-I are
approved for mild to moderate AD). - Discontinue agents with anticholinergic effects.
- Reduce dosage or discontinue if side effects are
intolerable. - Monitor efficacy by caregiver report, quantified
mental status examination, effects on activities
of daily living, or effects on behavior.
129AChEs Contd
- Continue for 6-12 months if any of the efficacy
measures indicate benefit or there is
stabilization in functional, cognitive, or
behavioral deterioration. - Continue AChE-I therapy until there is evidence
of ongoing cognitive decline. If there is
evidence of continuing cognitive decline, reduce
the dosage and monitor to determine if there is
an acceleration of deterioration. If
deterioration is accelerated, reintroduce
AChE-I.
130Alzheimer Manifestations
Activity of Daily Living
Behavior
Cognitive Dysfunction
All aided by Anti-esterases
131Cholinesterase Blockers
132Cholinesterase blockers
133(No Transcript)
134Types of Cholinergic Receptors
- Muscarinic excitatory
- M1 most common in cortex
- M2 presynaptic autorecptor governing release in
basal forebrain - Work via G proteins
- Nicotinic Inhibitory
- Ligand-gated ion channels
135Acetylcholine
- Formation ChAT and Acetyl-CoA
- Degradation AchE and Butyryl-cholinesterase
136Butyrylcholinesterase
- Role is minor in normal brain
- Proportionate activity increases in Alzheimer
brain
137AChE inhibitors Progression?
- Patients on AChE inhibitors had a slower rate of
progression than placebo treated patients - Raises the issue of possible biological effect of
these agents to slow progression of disease
138Galantamine (Reminyl)
- Start at 4 mg BID (8 mg/day) for at least 4
weeks, then 8 mg bid Available in 4 mg, 8 mg,
and 12 mg tablets Most frequent adverse events
that occurred with placebo, REMINYL 16 mg/day,
and REMINYL 24 mg/day, respectively, were nausea
(5, 13, 17), vomiting (1, 6, 10), diarrhea
(6, 12, 6), anorexia (3, 7, 9), and weight
decrease (1, 5, 5).
139Reminyl
- Average approx. 4 pts on ADAS-Cog Scores
140Galantamine
- Common snowdrop (Galanthus nivalis)
- Binds AChE
- Modulator of Nicotinic Receptors
- ?Enhanced Sexual Fxn
- Mythology
- Iliad, Circe, Atropine, Jimsonweed
141Rivastigmine
- Exelon Approved in April 2000 for treatment of
mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease. - Benefits Improved activities of daily living,
including eating, dressing, and household
chores. Reduce behavioral symptoms, such as
delusions and agitation. Improved cognitive
function Reduced use of psychotropic medications
142Faster Progression yields Increased response
- Patients with moderate-stage AD (Mini-Mental
State Examination MMSE scores 10-17) have a
naturally faster rate of disease progression when
taking placebo and a larger magnitude of response
to cholinesterase inhibitors patients with
mild-stage AD (MMSE scores 18-26) have a lesser
magnitude of response.28 In addition, a
subanalysis of a large rivastigmine trial found
that a faster rate of progression before therapy
initiation (regardless of disease stage at
baseline) predicted a more robust response to
treatment.29
143Rivastigmine
- Shown to improve Global function, behavior, and
Cognition
144Rivastigmine
- Temporarily inactivates Cholinesterase by forming
a Covalent Bond - 3 mg bid decreases AChE in CSF by 46
- 6mg bid decreases AChE by 62
- Duration of signif inhibition lasts up to 6 hours.
145Alzheimer Scales
- CIBIC-Plus 1-7
- Clinicians interview-based impression of change
with caregiver input - 1marked improvement, 4nc, 7marked worsening
- ADAS-Cog0-70
- Higher scoresgreater cognitive impairment
- Mild to moderate15-25
- 6-12 points/yr average deterioration
146Rivastigmine GI Effects
- 18 Men, 26 Women at Max dose
147ADAS-Cog Effects
148Rivastigmine
- Dose titrate dosage to achieve optimal effect.
Usual dose 6 to 12 mg/day given BID. Start 1.5
mg bid, increase by 3 mg every 2 weeks.
Available in capsule doses of 1.5, 3, 4.5, 6 mg. - Half life 2 hours Few interactions with other
drugs Side effects No hepatotoxicity GI
disturbances, occur mainly during dose
adjustment.
149(No Transcript)
150Aricept (donepezil)
- Indicated for mild to moderate Alzheimer's
dementia - More selective for acetylcholinesterase, the
cholinesterase common in the brain, believed to
account for the low incidence of GI side effects - 5 mg qd for 4 to 6 wk, if tolerate increase to 10
mg qd
151Aricept
- Pharmacology Half life 72-hour Steady states
are achieved in 15 days. 94 protein-bound
metabolized by the hepatic P450 enzyme system,
but few drug interactions have been identified.
Adverse effect nausea, vomiting,
gastrointestinal cramping, diarrhea and muscle
cramping. Does not have hepatoxicity.
152(No Transcript)
153Behavior Problems
- Personality change apathetic or more impulsive
- Anxiety
- apprehension over upcoming events
- Aggression
- physical or verbal
154Behavior contd
- Wandering
- can be dangerous, medications not effective
- provide a "sheltered freedom". Example Cover
door knob with shoe boxes. - Screaming
- very disturbing, may be related to pain, delusion
or Neuroleptic induced akathisia. ? background
music may be helpful. Sleep disruption
Sundowning very common
155Agitation and Dementia
- Structure and routine.
- Follow regular, predictable routines.
- Keep things simple.
- Distract.
156Behavior
- Why is depression relatively uncommon??
- Anosognosia for dementia
157Simple and Active
- Break down complex tasks into many small, simple
steps that the person can handle Folding towels
while one is doing the laundry. Allow time for
frequent rests. Redirect. Get the person to do
something else as a substitute. A person who is
restless and fidgety can be asked to sweep, dust,
rake, fold clothes, or take a walk or a car ride
with the caregiver. - Repetitive simple movement
158Distract
- Offer a snack Put on a favorite videotape or some
familiar music Be flexible. Know when to back
away from a task- a bath or dressing and
reapproach later Soothe. When agitated, do
simple, repetitive activities such as massage,
hair brushing, or giving a manicure. Reassure.
Let the person know that you are there and will
keep him or her safe.
159Sleep and Anxiety
- Nonpharmacologic Daytime stimulation, adequate
supervision, avoidance of napping. - Neuroleptics may be helpful for delusion and
agitation. 20 may get worse.
160For Sleep
- Chloral hydrate, 500 to 1000 mg prn up to 2/d or
10/wk - Zolpidem (Ambien), 5 to 10 mg hs prn
- Lorazepam (Ativan), 0.5 to 1 mg prn (up to 2/d or
10/wk) - Buspirone (Buspar), 5 to 10 mg tid for short-term
(few weeks) - Trazodone (Desyrel), 50 mg hs, may increase
gradually to 50 mg bid or tid - Melatonin, 1 to 2 mg hs prn (investigational)
161Agitation
- Olanzapine (Zyprexa) 2.5 mg qhs Max 10-20
mg/day given in bid. - Quetiapine (Seroquel) 12.5 mg bid Max 75 mg
bid. More sedating, may cause transient
orthostasis. - Risperidone (Risprdal) 0.25-1 mg qd to bid, EPS
may occur at 2 mg. - Little use for older neuroleptics Haldol etc
-
162Agitation (cont)
-
- Trazadone 25 mg hs, increase as tolerated,
- Prozac 10-20 mg qam
- Sertraline 25-100 mg qam
- Desipramine 25-100 mg qhs
- Nortriptyline 10-100 mg qhs
- Celexa 20 mg Citalopram
163Agitation (Cont)
- Anxiolytics for short term use, long term use
may worsen cognitive function Lorazepam 0.5 - 2
mg - Buspar Takes long to act.
- Anticonvulsants Use is common, but questionable.
May ameliorate mood fluctuations, impulsiveness
Carbamazepine 100 mg bid, titrate Depakene 125 mg
bid, titrate - Beta blockers ?behavioral outbursts
164Vit E Selegiline
- Slow the progression of AD (Sano et al, 1997).
- Rate of progression -25 less than the rate in
placebo Dose used in study - Vitamin E 2000 I.U. Selegiline 5 mg am, 5 mg
noon. - Long-term effects unknown. Side effects
Selegiline insomnia, confusion, and psychosis.
Vitamin E Can potentially cause a prolonged
prothrombin time for pateints on coumadin - Selegiline, Vit E treatment - NEJM 1997
165Time course in deterioration
166Pathogenesis
- Beta-Amyloid Accumuation
- Decrease in Acetylcholine, AchE
- Injury
- Free-Radical Formation
- Genetics
- Polygenic
- ApoE4
- FAD
167Characteristic Changes
- Pathology
- Tangles, plaques, Hirano bodies, Atrophy,neuronal
loss - Biochemistry
- Decreased Ach, AchE
- Imaging
- Atrophy
- Decreased metab activity in postr cerebral
associaation Corices
168Senile Plaque
- A hallmark pathologic lesion specific for AD is
senile plaque. Plaques are composed of
amyloid-beta (A-beta), which is found in soluble
form in the body fluids of patients with AD.
Initially, A-beta aggregates into diffuse plaques
that lack definite borders. Later, it matures
into compact plaques formed of A-beta fibrils
that may be toxic to surrounding neurons.
169Amyloid
170Amyloid Plaque
171Neurofibrillary Tangle
- Abnormal intracellular structure caused by
phosphorylation of the tau protein in the
cytoskeleton of the neuron. - Microglial cell proliferation, especially in
association with senile plaques, suggests
inflammatory processes play a role in the disease
process.
172Neurofibrillary Tangles
173Beta Amyloid
- 4.2 kD fragment, 42-43
- Abnormal cleavage of Beta Amyloid precursor
protein (APP) - APP part of family of 70kD transmembrane proteins
- Beta-Secretase, APP cleaving Protein
- Injury, ischemia incr APP
- Amyloid is neurotoxic
174New Strategies
- Beta-Amyloid Vaccine
- Beta and Gamma Secretase Blockers
- Zinc and Copper Chelators
175Evolving Therapies
- Vaccine
- Secretin inhibitors
- Blocking Amyloid Accumulation