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Psychiatric Times. Vol. 27 No. 2
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CATEGORY 1 

Dementia: A Focused Review

By Raj K. Kalapatapu, MD | February 9, 2010
Dr Kalapatapu is a fellow in the department of addiction psychiatry at Columbia University, New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York. He completed a fellowship in geriatric psychiatry at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York in July 2009. The author reports no conflicts of interest concerning the subject matter of this article and has declined the honorarium for this article.

Huntington disease dementia

A trinucleotide repeat in the gene encoding for the huntingtin protein causes Huntington disease. The prevalence of Huntington disease is approximately 7 to 10 cases per 100,000 in white populations and is lower in mixed white, black, and Asian populations.40

In the early stages, cognitive impairments in attention, concentration, visuospatial ability, emotional processing, and memory become noticeable. In later stages, cognitive impairments in planning, problem solving, cognitive flexibility, and freedom from distractibility become evident. Cognitive impairments worsen to dementia, which is characterized by slow information processing, decreased motivation, depression, apathy, and personality changes.

Language is relatively spared. Psychosis and affective disturbances, including depression, suicide, and mania, develop in many patients. In the early stages, structural changes are relatively specific and primarily affect the caudate and putamen. Psychomotor, executive, visuospatial, and memory deteriorations appear to develop from basal ganglia pathology, which disturbs normal cognitive processes mediated by frontostriatal circuits. Resting-state and neurocognitive-activation functional imaging studies suggest that striatal and cortical dysfunction contributes to cognitive status.41

Treatments must be targeted to the stage of the disease. Nonpharmacological treatments for cognitive impairment include the use of schedules, “to do” lists, routines, and cues to help memory retrieval. Symptomatic treatment is the foundation of pharmacological management. However, a review of 22 trials that comprised 1254 patients who had Huntington disease found that no intervention produced a robust conclusive symptomatic effect.42 A review of another 8 trials involving 1366 patients found that no intervention modified disease progression.43 Depressive symptoms may respond to SSRIs, mirtazapine(Drug information on mirtazapine), or venlafaxine, although further data are needed to determine efficacy and safety.44

Conclusion

Newer treatment strategies and clearer descriptions of disease processes that cause dementia are two of the goals of current research (Table 6).

The concept of cognitive impairment entails many different terms, such as dementia, amnestic disorder, CIND, cognitive changes associated with normal aging, mild cognitive impairment, vascular cognitive impairment, and VCIND. The workup must be individualized to each patient’s unique presentation. A proactive and detailed investigation for any possible etiology is warranted. Management of any patient with dementia must be within the context of a comprehensive treatment plan.

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by Rajnikant Kothari | December 06, 2010 8:24 PM EST

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