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Query: UMLS:C0020473 (
hyperlipidemia
)
15,891
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Dementia is the development of multiple cognitive deficits that includes memory impairment and at least one of the following--Aphasia, apraxia, agnosia or disturbances in executive functioning. The common causes of dementia among the elderly are Alzheimer's disease, vascular dementia, mixed dementia and
Lewy body disease
. The concept of reversible dementia was introduced in 1980 when a task force sponsored by National Institute of Ageing found 10-12% of dementia cases in older group to have reversible causes such as metabolic-nutritional, drugs, infections, psychiatric disorders etc. In our series of 76 patients in the presenile age group (<65 years), 34.21% (26/76) had a reversible condition underlying the dementia. 43.42% (33/76) had vascular dementia, 13.15% (10/76) had Alzheimer's disease and 9.21% (7/76) had mixed dementia. Hypertension,
hyperlipidemia
and diabetes mellitus were commoner in the vascular dementia group as compared to the Alzheimer's group. Evaluation of MRI as a tool in diagnosis of dementia showed increased sensitivity of MRI towards detecting lacunes. The potentially reversible dementias comprised infections 14.47% (11/76), metabolic-nutritional 14.47% (11/76) and autoimmune diseases 3.94% (3/76). These were characterized by a subcortical dementia. Four month follow up of MMSE in this group showed significant and sustained improvement in the metabolic nutritional group.
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PMID:Presenile dementia--etiology, clinical profile and treatment response at four month follow up. 1588 51
It has become increasingly apparent, especially with the advent of MRI brain scanning, that a large number of patients develop signal intensity changes in the subcortical white matter and periventricular region as they age. This appears to be accelerated by risk factors for small vessel cerebrovascular disease such as hypertension, smoking, diabetes mellitus and
hyperlipidemia
. The major question becomes when such changes become clinically significant. It is obvious that subcortical lacunar-type infarction can be identified by the clinical presentation. For example, typical examples of so-called "lacunar syndrome" include pure motor hemiparesis, pure sensory stroke, sensorimotor stroke, clumsy hand-dysarthria, and hemiataxia-hemiparesis. The issue becomes a measure of impact on functional ability. This is influenced by several factors. Baseline IQ and educational level, as well as expectations of age, certainly play a role. A person who develops cognitive impairment and long tract signs in their 50s or 60s is certainly going to be recognized as more impaired than an 80 year old individual who is retired and primarily is engaged in recreational activity. It would be expected that a person born with limited intellectual capacity and/or limited educational opportunity would be less likely to be identified as impaired than a person who has achieved substantial economic achievement through their innate talents. The concept of tissue loss or lesion load becomes important when determining how pronounced the ischemic cerebrovascular changes translate into functional impairment. Correlative pathology may include cortical atrophy and ventricular dilatation. Loss of either cortical or subcortical tissue function is expected to be related to functional compromise. In addition, there are potential features such as the coexistence of small vessel cerebrovascular disease and Alzheimer's disease. Small vessel cerebrovascular disease might also play a contributing factor in patients susceptible to
Dementia with Lewy Bodies
or patients susceptible to fronto-temporal dementia or any other dementing process. Thus, the concept of tissue loss or lesion burden of disease becomes increasingly important as we recognize the potential for multifactorial issues, including genetic factors, to contribute to the phenotypic expression. The relationships between cognitive impairment, dementia and subcortical vascular lesions are poorly understood. There have been several papers on the different aspects of cerebral insults and their impact on cognition, the various kinds of dementia and different methods of analyzing the impact of the various insults to the brain. This chapter is an attempt to review all pertinent information currently available on the poorly understood condition of "subcortical ischemic cerebrovascular dementia."
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PMID:Subcortical ischemic cerebrovascular dementia. 1950 11