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This is the merged set of all L1-6 of NP2, however each set has yet to be checked against the books or slides.
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DSM-5 Minor NCD (MCI) — cognitive criterion
Modest decline; concerns reported AND objective assessment shows 1–2 SD below norm
DSM-5 Minor NCD (MCI) — functioning criterion
Independence in daily functioning is relatively intact
DSM-5 Major NCD (Dementia) — cognitive criterion
Significant decline; concerns reported AND objective assessment shows greater than 2 SD below norm
DSM-5 Major NCD (Dementia) — functioning criterion
Interference with independence in everyday activities
DSM-5 dementia umbrella principle
DSM-5 Major NCD does NOT specify cause; etiology is determined separately by underlying brain pathology
Dementia subtypes by prevalence in the Netherlands (Franke 2018)
AD 65%, VaD 22%, FTD 4%, Lewy Bodies 2%; mixed etiology far more likely in patients over 75
MCI conversion rate
Approximately 50% convert to dementia within 5–10 years; a proportion have no underlying neurodegeneration
MCI treatment
No intervention proven to delay or prevent conversion; management involves reassessment, psychoeducation, and early cognitive training
Alzheimer's disease definition
Most common dementia (~70% of cases); neurodegenerative; first and most prominent symptom is gradually progressive memory loss; neuropsychiatric symptoms (depression, apathy, anxiety) are also common
AD final stage
Completely dependent, confused, and incontinent
AD diagnostic criteria
(1) Major NCD confirmed; (2) vague onset with gradual progression over months–years; (3) impairment in at least 2 domains (memory, EF, language, visuospatial); (4) no substantial concurrent CVD, neurological, or psychiatric disease
AD neuropathology
Extracellular plaques of amyloid-beta protein AND intracellular tangles of tau protein leading to neurodegeneration and atrophy; confirmed post-mortem only
AD MRI findings
Extreme cortical shrinkage, severely enlarged ventricles, extreme hippocampal shrinkage
AD EEG findings
Slowing of alpha activity
AD PET findings
Reduced cerebral glucose metabolism
Amyloid cascade hypothesis
Amyloid-beta is the primary driver of AD; clearing it is the main therapy target; clinical efficacy is inconclusive; criticism includes unclear cause vs consequence and failed treatments
Vascular hypothesis of AD
Vascular risk factors reduce blood flow and oxygen, causing a metabolic reaction that leads to overproduction of amyloid-beta
Most currently accepted AD causal model
Combined amyloid and vascular hypothesis
AD non-modifiable risk factors
Age, female sex, genetic predisposition
AD modifiable risk factors
12 lifestyle factors including exercise, diet, and mental activity (Kessels Fig 19.2)
CDR 0.5 (MCI stage)
Memory complaints, subtle decline, independence intact; initial complaints include forgetting recent events, appointments, and word-finding problems
CDR 1 (Mild dementia)
Language production declines, orientation in time and place declines, planning and performing activities declines → clear daily limitations
CDR 2 (Moderate dementia)
More extensive impairments; increased dependency on others; basic ADL such as dressing become difficult
CDR 3 (Severe dementia)
Completely dependent, confused, incontinent
AD treatment — mild to moderate
Cholinesterase inhibitors
AD treatment — moderate to severe
Memantine (NMDA antagonist)
AD treatment — always first step
Psychoeducation
NPA in AD — Stage 1 Complaints analysis
Interview patient AND close relative separately; anosognosia common so patient may trivialise or deny; ask about subjective complaints, onset, psychiatric symptoms, daily independence, family and medication history; screening with MMSE
NPA in AD — Stage 2 Problem analysis
Test memory (early = anterograde LTM decline; late = retrograde and semantic too), EF (cognitive flexibility, planning), attention (mental flexibility, divided), and visuospatial and language; tests include Visual Association Test, word recall, TMT, Stroop, digit span, clock drawing
NPA in AD — neuropsychiatric symptoms
Depression, anxiety, apathy, social disengagement, irritability, psychosis (hallucinations/delusions), agitation/aggression/wandering, motor unrest, sleep/eating problems, olfactory dysfunction, seizures (10–20%, usually late stages), motor signs (late)
NPA in AD — Stage 3 Diagnosis
Medical history + clinical exam + neuroimaging + NPA
Posterior Cortical Atrophy (PCA)
Atypical AD variant; prominent visuospatial deficits, memory relatively intact ("visual variant"); atrophy in parietal and occipital regions
Logopenic PPA (LvPPA)
Atypical AD variant; predominant language and communication deficits; memory and EF affected later ("language variant"); left temporal asymmetric atrophy; 75% have underlying AD pathology
Behavioural/Dysexecutive AD variant
Atypical AD variant; behaviour, EF, and social cognition decline; ranges from disinhibition to apathy; mimics bvFTD; biomarkers needed to differentiate; atrophy in frontal lobe
Typical vs Atypical AD
Typical AD has prominent memory impairment and atrophy starting in mediotemporal lobe; atypical AD has other prominent cognitive impairments and atrophy in different cortical regions; ALL have the same underlying neuropathology (amyloid + tau)
AD certainty increases with
Formal neuropsychological assessment, neuroimaging (CT/MRI/PET), CSF analyses, and genetic mutation (very rare); neuropathology confirmed only post-mortem
AD seizures
Occur in 10–20% of AD patients, usually in late stages
AD motor signs
Appear late in the disease course
AD olfactory dysfunction
Present in AD as a neuropsychiatric/non-cognitive symptom
AD anosognosia in clinical interview
Patient may trivialise or deny problems; always interview a close relative separately; this is why heteroanamnesis is essential in the diagnostic cycle
NPA Stage 4 in AD
Indication for treatment — follows diagnosis in the diagnostic cycle
Neuropsychiatric symptoms of AD — full list
Depression, anxiety, apathy, social disengagement, irritability, psychosis (hallucinations/delusions), agitation/aggression/wandering, motor unrest, sleep and eating problems, olfactory dysfunction, seizures (10–20%, usually late), and motor signs (late)
Language — general and aging
Generally stable overall across the lifespan; confrontation naming is the exception (stable to age 70 then declines)
Older adults performance crossover
Older adults outperform younger adults on crystallised tasks but perform worse on fluid tasks
Cognitive retraining — strategy training
Strategy training targets memory, reasoning, and processing speed; ACTIVE trial showed 10 sessions → less decline in instrumental ADL at 5 years
Cognitive retraining — home vs lab
Home video training is 74% as effective as lab-based training (ACTIVE trial)
Protective lifestyle factors — intellectual activities
Puzzles, reading, bridge, and music all support cognitive aging
Protective lifestyle factors — exercise
Especially cardiovascular exercise is protective against cognitive decline
Protective lifestyle factors — social engagement
Travel, cultural events, and socialising are associated with better cognitive aging
Observational study limitation (lifestyle-cognition)
Lifestyle-cognition studies are largely observational; causal direction is unclear — it is possible that cognitively healthier people are more active rather than activity causing better cognition
Neural reserve vs neural compensation
Neural reserve = efficiency of existing networks; neural compensation = recruitment of alternative networks when primary networks fail; both form cognitive reserve
Dedifferentiation (STAC)
Older adults use MORE brain areas for working memory and episodic tasks on fMRI than younger adults; reflects less selective, less efficient processing; part of the scaffolding response to age-related decline
Vascular dementia prevalence in Netherlands
22% of dementias (Franke 2018); pure VaD and pure AD mostly in relatively young patients; mixed etiology far more likely in patients over 75
VaD pathology types
(1) One or more strategic strokes ("multi-infarct dementia"); (2) Small Vessel Disease (SVD) — umbrella for small vessel abnormalities causing widespread WM lesions ("white matter changes" on MRI)
VaD course
Can start suddenly (strategic/multiple minor strokes) OR slowly (small vessel disease); severity and localisation create very heterogeneous clinical picture
Post-stroke dementia
Within 3–12 months after stroke, approximately 25% of patients are classified with major NCD/dementia
VaD cognitive profile — most distinctive feature
Mental and psychomotor slowing — differentiates from AD
VaD cognitive profile — primary deficits
Problems with initiating, planning, and mental flexibility (executive function primarily affected)
VaD cognitive profile — relatively intact
Memory and language (contrast with AD where these are primary)
VaD other symptoms
Personality change, denial, loss of insight, motor symptoms (gait, balance, slowness of thought)
VaD risk factors
Age over 65, HTN, high cholesterol, smoking, obesity, diabetes, cardiac history, TIA/stroke history (similar to heart disease and stroke risk factors)
AD vs VaD cognitive contrast
AD: memory and language decline first; VaD: slowing and EF decline first, memory relatively spared
FTD spectrum definition
Wide spectrum of clinical and pathological neurodegenerative diseases; also includes ALS, Corticobasal syndrome (CBS), and Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP)
FTD epidemiology
10–20% of all dementias; 60% bvFTD and 30% svPPA; 75% early onset (under 65), most 45–65 years at first symptoms; disease duration 2–20 years; death often indirect (pneumonia, heart failure, malnutrition)
FTD diagnostic limitations
No biomarker diagnostic test; no curative treatment
FTD misdiagnosis rate
40% misdiagnosis rate; initially wrongly diagnosed as autism, depression, OCD, ADHD, or late-onset schizophrenia; biomarkers (CSF/PET amyloid) needed to differentiate from atypical AD behavioural variant
bvFTD diagnostic criteria
Progressive deterioration of behaviour/cognition; 75% disinhibition, 85% apathy, 80% eating behaviour changes; NP profile shows EF and social cognition severely impaired; memory and visuospatial relatively spared
FTD neuroimaging
Strongly asymmetric frontal and temporal atrophy (AD is more symmetrical); bvFTD shows prefrontal and orbitofrontal atrophy; PPA shows left-sided greater than right-sided atrophy
svPPA (Semantic variant PPA) speech profile
Fluent, grammatically correct but empty content; poor word-finding and naming; loss of word meaning