Cases That Test Your Skills

After 62 years, her husband is a ‘stranger’

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Ms. A, age 83, is increasingly confused and agitated. She attacks caregivers and distrusts her friends at church. The challenge: diagnose her dementia, quell her aggressive behavior, and slow her cognitive decline.


 

References

Presenting symptoms: Marital memories

Ms. A, age 83, has been experiencing increasing confusion, agitation, and memory loss across 4 to 5 years. Family members say her memory loss has become prominent within the last year. She can no longer cook, manage her finances, shop, or perform other basic activities. At times she does not recognize her husband of 62 years and needs help with bathing and grooming.

Ms. A’s Folstein Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) score is 18, indicating moderate dementia. She exhibits disorientation, diminished short-term memory, impaired attention including apraxia, and executive dysfunction. Her Geriatric Depression Scale (15-item short form) score indicates normal mood.

A neurologic exam reveals mild parkinsonism, including mild bilateral upper-extremity cogwheeltype rigidity and questionable frontal release signs including a possible mild bilateral grasp reflex. No snout reflex was seen.

This presentation suggests Ms. A has:

  • Alzheimer’s disease
  • Lewy body dementia
  • or vascular dementia

The authors’ observations:

Differentiating among Alzheimer’s, Lewy body, and vascular dementias is important (Table 1), as their treatments and clinical courses differ.

The initial workup’s goal is to diagnose a reversible medical condition that may be hastening cognitive decline. Brain imaging (CT or MRI) can uncover cerebrovascular disease, subdural hematomas, normal-pressure hydrocephalus, tumors, or other cerebral diseases. Laboratory tests can reveal systemic conditions such as hypothyroidism, vitamin B12 deficiency, hypercalcemia, neurosyphilis, or HIV infection.1

Table 1

Differences in Alzheimer’s, Lewy body, and vascular dementias

Alzheimer’s dementiaLewy body dementiaVascular dementia
Gradual onset and chronic cognitive decline
Memory difficulty combined with apraxia, aphasia, agnosia, or executive dysfunction
Cognitive, memory changes with one or more of the following:
  • visual hallucinations
  • fluctuating consciousness (“sundowning”)
  • parkinsonian features
Early findings often include depression or personality changes, plus incontinence and gait disorder
Psychosis common in middle to late stagesVisual hallucinations, other psychoses in early stages
Periods of marked delirium, “sundowning”
Temporal relationship between stroke and dementia onset, but variability in course
Day-to-day cognitive performance stableCognitive performance fluctuates during early stages.Day-to-day cognitive performance stable
Parkinsonism not apparent in early stages, may present in middle to late stagesParkinsonism in early stages
Tremor not common
Gait disorder and parkinsonism common, especially with basal ganglia infarcts
Neurologic signs present in late stagesExquisite sensitivity to neuroleptic therapyIncreased sensitivity to neuroleptics
Cannot be explained as vascular or mixed-type dementiaCannot be explained as vascular or mixed-type dementiaImaging necessary to document cerebrovascular disease

With a thorough history and laboratory testing, a diagnosis of “probable” AD can be as much as 85% accurate. Probable AD is characterized by progressive gradual decline of cognitive functions affecting memory and at least one other domain including executive dysfunction, apraxia, aphasia, and/or agnosia. These deficits must cause significant functional impairment.

Neurologic test results may support AD diagnosis after ruling out reversible causes of dementia. Neuropsychological testing can provide valuable early information when subtle findings cannot be ascertained on clinical screening. (For a listing of neuropsychological tests, see this article at currentpsychiatry.com.)

Diagnosis: An unpredictable patient

Ms. A received a CBC; comprehensive metabolic panel; urinalysis; screens for rapid plasma reagin, B12, folate, and homocysteine levels; and a brain MRI. Hemoglobin and serum albumin were mildly depressed, reflecting early malnutrition. MRI showed generalized cerebral atrophy. Significant vascular disease was not identified.

Ms. A was diagnosed as having probable Alzheimer’s-type dementia based on the test results and the fact that her cognition was steadily declining. Other explanatory mechanisms were absent. She did not exhibit hallucinatory psychosis or fluctuating consciousness, which would signal Lewy body dementia.

Table 2

Medications for treating agitation in Alzheimer’s dementia

DrugSupporting evidenceRecommended dosage (mg/d)*RationaleDrawbacks
Anticonvulsants
CarbamazepineTariot et al2200 to 1,200 mg/d in divided dosesCommonly used for impulse control disordersAgranulocytosis, hyponatremia, liver toxicity (all rare)
DivalproexLoy and Tariot3250 to 2,000 mg/dIncreasing evidence points to neuroprotective qualitiesPossible white blood cell suppression, liver toxicity, pancreatitis (all rare)
GabapentinRoane et al4100 to 1,200 mg/dSafe in patients with hepatic dysfunctionScant data on use in Alzheimer’s disease
LamotrigineTekin et al5Start at 25 mg/d; titrate slowly to 50 to 200 mg/dPossibly neuroprotective via N-methyl-D-aspartate mechanismRapid titration may cause Stevens-Johnson syndrome
Atypical antipsychotics
OlanzapineStreet et al6 2.5 to 10 mg/dSedating effects may aid sleepAnticholinergic effects may increase confusion, compound cognitive deficit
QuetiapineTariot et al7 25 to 300 mg/dTolerable Sedating effects may aid sleepWatch for orthostasis, especially at higher dosages
RisperidoneDeVane et al8 0.25 to 3 mg/dStrong data support useHigh orthostatic potential, possible extrapyramidal symptoms with higher dosages
ZiprasidoneNoneOral:20to80mgbid IM: 10 to 20 mg, maximum 40 mg over 24 hoursEffective in managing agitationNo controlled trials, case reports in AD-associated agitation
SSRIs
CitalopramPollock et al9 10 to 40 mg/dMinimal CYP-2D6 inhibitionEffect may take 2 to 4 weeks
SertralineLyketsos et al10 25 to 200 mg/dMinimal CYP-2D6 inhibitionEffect may take 2 to 4 weeks
* No specific, widely accepted dosing guidelines exist for patients age > 65, but this group often does not tolerate higher dosages.
SSRI: Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor
IM: Intramuscula

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