Difference between revisions of "Rapidly progressing dementias"
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#Secondary encephalopathies (toxic metabolic encephalopathy) | #Secondary encephalopathies (toxic metabolic encephalopathy) | ||
+ | '''Diagnostic approach''' (Geschwind, 2016) | ||
+ | * Initial evaluation | ||
+ | ** establish time course, highlight initial symptoms, r/o delirium | ||
+ | *** autoimmune encephalopathies often affect limbic areas and may present with memory and/or behavioral symptoms | ||
+ | *** viral encephalopathies or acute demyelinating encephalomyelitis may present after flu-like illness | ||
+ | ** screening tests | ||
+ | *** blood studies: CBC, BMP, LFTs, RPR, rheum screen (ESR, ANA, CRP), B12, HIV, medication levels | ||
+ | *** urine studies: u/a, utox (if indicated) | ||
+ | *** CSF: cell count and diferential, protein, glucose, IgG index, oligoclonal bands, VDRL, 14-3-3 protein western blot, Total tau ELISA, neuron specific enolase ELISA, RT-QuIC, cryptococcal antigen, viral PCRs/antibodies/cultures, bacterial/fungal/acid-fast bacilli stains/cultures, cytology, flow cytometry | ||
+ | *** EEG | ||
'''Imaging''' | '''Imaging''' |
Revision as of 09:03, 17 April 2022
Dementias which progress from normal cognition to severe dementia in less than 2 years (unofficial definition) (Salardini 2019).
- In addition to cognitive decline, they often have behavioral problems, pyramidal or extrapyramidal symptoms, EEG changes, and myoclonus.
Categories (Salardini 2019)
- Prion disease – misfolded prions are infectious proteins which cause devastating neurodegenerative illness
- Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD)
- Most common form of prion disease
- Presents with cognitive symptoms, pyramidal / extrapyramidal motor symptoms, ataxia, myoclonus, and psychiatric symptoms
- Fatal familial insomnia (FFI)
- Presents with insomnia, dysautonomia, cognitive problems
- Gerstmann-Straussler-Schinker syndrome (GSS)
- Cerebellar and/or extrapyramidal symptoms
- Slow progression over 10-20 years
- Kuru
- Variant CJD
- Caused by eating contaminated meat of livestock with bovine spongiform encephalopathy
- Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD)
- Atypical presentation of other primary dementias
- Autoimmune diseases including autoimmune encephalitis
- Secondary encephalopathies (toxic metabolic encephalopathy)
Diagnostic approach (Geschwind, 2016)
- Initial evaluation
- establish time course, highlight initial symptoms, r/o delirium
- autoimmune encephalopathies often affect limbic areas and may present with memory and/or behavioral symptoms
- viral encephalopathies or acute demyelinating encephalomyelitis may present after flu-like illness
- screening tests
- blood studies: CBC, BMP, LFTs, RPR, rheum screen (ESR, ANA, CRP), B12, HIV, medication levels
- urine studies: u/a, utox (if indicated)
- CSF: cell count and diferential, protein, glucose, IgG index, oligoclonal bands, VDRL, 14-3-3 protein western blot, Total tau ELISA, neuron specific enolase ELISA, RT-QuIC, cryptococcal antigen, viral PCRs/antibodies/cultures, bacterial/fungal/acid-fast bacilli stains/cultures, cytology, flow cytometry
- EEG
- establish time course, highlight initial symptoms, r/o delirium
Imaging
DWI images of 2 patients with suspected CJD (Salardini 2019)
- In axial view of patient A there is characteristic increased cortical signal (cortical ribboning) suggesting cortical cytotoxic edema
- In axial view of patient B there is characteristic increased signal in caudate and mesial thalamus (hockey stick)
References
Geschwind MD. Rapidly progressive dementia. Continuum. Apr:22(2 Dementia):510-537 (2016). https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27042906/
Salardini A. An Overview of Primary Dementias as Clinicopathological Entities. Semin. Neurol. 39, 153–166 (2019). https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30925609/