1 / 20

Dementia

Dementia. Psychology 2617. Introduction. We are all getting older…. Baby boomers are getting really old (basically my parents’ generation) So, we are starting to take notice of cognitive and neural declines with aging Big big political thing too. Normal Aging.

kyria
Download Presentation

Dementia

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Dementia Psychology 2617

  2. Introduction • We are all getting older…. • Baby boomers are getting really old • (basically my parents’ generation) • So, we are starting to take notice of cognitive and neural declines with aging • Big big political thing too

  3. Normal Aging • Older people are usually happier than us! • They get fewer small ailment • But more big ones • Many big adjustments though

  4. Cognitive changes • Seems that there are cognitive changes, though how, why and to what extent, that is controversial • Crystallized vs fluid intelligence • Biggest changes are in new learning, abstract problem solving and behavioural speed

  5. Brain changes • Brain does not age uniformly • Parietal lobe for example remains pretty much intact • Biggest decline is in the prefrontal cortex, where we think executive functioning is, explains the drop off in problem solving • Neurotransmitter changes and Parkinson’s

  6. Dimentia • Multi infarct dimentia is probably the biggest cause of dimentia • Cortical vs subcortical dimentia • Static vs progressive • Reversible vs irreversible

  7. Alzheimer’s • More than half of all dimentia is from AD • 2 times more women than men • Could be because women live longer though • Dimentia and brain stuff • Neurofibrillary tangles and neuritic plaques

  8. AD • MASSIVE cell death • In essence, you get like lesions everywhere • ‘cortical’ dimentia, but you get these lesions, holes really, everywhere

  9. Neurotransmitters affected • ACh is important in memory, especially in HP • The ACh system is severely damaged in AD • Indeed it is almost targeted • Other systems too though

  10. Memory effects • Episodic effects • Eventually semantic effects • Retrieval cues don’t help • Information was not even encoded • Nondeclarative stuff, skills etc, are the last to go

  11. Treatment • Most drugs target the cholinergic system • This disease not only affects the victim, but also his/her family • NGF is promising • Treatments will come, but, reversal, I dunno • Respite care is key for the family

  12. Parkinson’s • And the depression continues • Does not always lead to dimentia, but it certainly can • Basically massive cell death in the substantia negra • This connects to the premotor cortex, controls fluidity of movement

  13. symptoms • Starts out looking like normal aging • Aches and pains • Weakness • Depression • Unsteadyness • Eventually you get tremors

  14. Symptoms continued • Bardykinesia • Masked facies • Festinating gait • Micrographia • Hypokinesia • Resting tremor • rigidity

  15. Non motor symptoms • Visuo spatial impairments • Executive functioning impairments • Few linguistic issues beyond motor aspects of speech • Some memory impairment • Mood problems

  16. Treatment • L Dopa is the ey • Basically maes more DA available • Can have powerful effects • MAOI as well

  17. Huntington’s • Exceedingly rare • Dominant gene • Puppet lie movement • Psychotic like symptoms • Caudate nucleus dysfunction • Initiating movement, modulating it • Chorea • No cure

  18. Creutzfeldt-Jakob • Anybody want a burger? • Also from just a random mutation • Spongiform disorders • Kuru or laughing disease

  19. symptoms • Rapid deterioration of virtually everything • Happens in like 4 months • No cure • No treatment • No fun

  20. Conclusions • Our best bet is probably genetic work • Gene therapy • Genetic counseling • Far as mad cow goes…..

More Related