Is he mentally ill?


In elderly, people often assume that state can’t be fixed and so don’t look into it



Yüklə 469 b.
səhifə29/30
tarix27.04.2018
ölçüsü469 b.
#49225
1   ...   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30

In elderly, people often assume that state can’t be fixed and so don’t look into it

  • May be superimposed on another diagnosis



  • Drug intoxication (including prescriptions)

    • Drug intoxication (including prescriptions)

    • Infections

    • Fever

    • Malnutrition

    • Head trauma

    • Pneumonia

    • Congestive heart failure

    • Cancer

    • Uremia

    • Dehydration

    • Stroke

    • Treatment: medical emergency

      • Usually reversible
      • May involve medications (neuroleptics or benzos for drug withdrawal)
      • May involve environmental manipulations such as orienting techniques


    Senility

    • Senility

    • Gradual deterioration of intellectual abilities to the point that social and occupational functioning are impaired.

    • Onset is typically gradual

    • Memory for recent events is affected in early stages.

    • With time, increasingly marked comprehension, motor control, problem solving and judgment

    • Often accompanied by impairment in emotional control or moral or ethical sensibilities

    • Dementia may be progressive or static

    • Occasionally reversible if underlying cause can be treated

    • Causes: stroke, degenerative diseases (Alzheimer’s, Huntington’s, Parkinson’s), infectious diseases (syphilis, meningitis, AIDS), intracranial tumors and abscesses, dietary deficiencies (B vitamins), head injury, anoxia, toxic substances

    • 30 % of those over 80

    • 3-9% of world’s adults

    • 5 million Americans

    • 70 forms identified



    Most common form of dementia. Accounts for 50-66% of all cases.

    • Most common form of dementia. Accounts for 50-66% of all cases.

    • Sometimes occurs in middle age (called early onset), but most often after age 65 (late onset). Prevalence markedly increases in late 70s and early 80s.

    • Problem may be underestimated.

    • Women have a slightly higher risk.

    • May survive for 20 years, but time between onset and death is usually 8-10 years.



    Begins with mild memory problems, lapses of attention, difficulties in language and communication.

    • Begins with mild memory problems, lapses of attention, difficulties in language and communication.

    • As symptoms worsen, difficulty completing complicated tasks. Eventually, sufferers have difficulty with simple tasks, distant memories are forgotten, changes in personality are very noticeable.

    • Typically early on deny they have a problem. Then become anxious or depressed about state of mind. Many become agitated.

    • As sx worsen, show less and less awareness of limitations.

    • During late stages, may withdraw. Also late stage—wandering, confused about time and space.

    • Eventually fully dependent. Fail to remember close relatives. Uncomfortable at night (sundowners). Late phase may last 2-5 yrs.

    • Stay physically healthy until later stages of disease. Often succumb to opportunistic infections—spend a lot of time lying—prone to pneumonia.

    • Can only be officially diagnosed after death



    Marked by neurofibrillary tangles

    • Marked by neurofibrillary tangles

      • Twisted protein fibers found within the cells of the hippocampus and other areas.
      • Occur in all people as they age, but Alzheimer's patients have lots
    • Senile plaques

      • Sphere-shaped deposits of a small molecule called beta-amyloid protein that form in the spaces between cells in the hippocampus, cerebral cortex, and other areas.
      • Normal part of aging, Alzheimer's patients have lots. In most people, these are comprised of 40 amino acids with a few that have 42. In Alzheimer's, there are many more AB42s.
      • Plaques may interfere with communication between cells and so cause cell breakdown or cell death.


    Genetics

    • Genetics

    • Many, but not all cases, run in families.

      • Distinguish between familial vs. sporadic Alzheimer's
    • Early onset—three rare genetic mutations that can cause this (about 5% of cases)—on chromosomes 21, 14, 1

    • Late onset—chromosome 19

    • MZ twins are not perfectly concordant.

    • Genetic risks interact with environment—diet, exposure to metals such as aluminum, experiencing head trauma

    • Exposure to ibuprofen may be protective



    No effective treatment exists

    • No effective treatment exists

    • Medications such as Cognex and Aricept and Namenda help delay

    • Work on vaccines continues

    • Behavioral techniques to control wandering, incontinence, inappropriate sexual behaviors, and poor self-care

    • Treating caregivers—social death of the patient; anticipatory grief

      • Caregivers are at risk for depression
      • Counseling and support are effective
      • About 70% live at home
      • ¾ of caregivers are women
      • Caring for a loved one takes an average of 69-100 hours per week
      • Major worries of caregiver—54% -cost of help, 49%-Alzheimer's related stress on family, 49%-lack of time to attend to own needs; Alzheimer's Assoc, 1997, Thomas et al 2002



    Yüklə 469 b.

    Dostları ilə paylaş:
    1   ...   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30




    Verilənlər bazası müəlliflik hüququ ilə müdafiə olunur ©muhaz.org 2024
    rəhbərliyinə müraciət

    gir | qeydiyyatdan keç
        Ana səhifə


    yükləyin