Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0085632 (apathy)
4,089 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Dementia with Lewy bodies is a relatively common cause of dementia. Much has been learned about this disorder, yet much remains to be elucidated, especially in regard to early clinical diagnosis. To clarify the future research agenda in this area, the authors critically appraise the literature on cognitive and behavioral changes in DLB and provide a brief overview of the history of DLB, the main pathological changes, and the findings related to extrapyramidal symptoms and treatment issues. Twenty-one studies on cognition and 47 on behavioral changes in DLB are reviewed. Impairments of working memory and visuospatial functions, visual hallucinations, and depression (or symptoms of depression such as apathy and anxiety) have been identified as early indicators of DLB. However, longitudinal and cross-sectional data are lacking, particularly for different aspects of working memory, visual perception, and non-psychotic behavioral symptoms.
...
PMID:A review of the cognitive and behavioral symptoms in dementia with Lewy bodies. 1108 60

Quantitative neuropsychiatry has provided increasingly precise descriptions of behavioral phenotypes associated with neurodegenerative disorders. Degenerative diseases of the brain are disturbances of protein metabolism, with failure of protein degredation by the ubiquitin-proteosome system, production of neurotoxic peptide oligomers, and accumulation of intracellular protein deposits. Abnormalities of amyloid beta peptide, alpha-synuclein protein, and hyperphosphorylated tau protein account for more than 90% of degenerative dementias. Functionally related neuroanatomical systems have shared metabolic characteristics and common vulnerabilities to protein dysmetabolism, providing the basis for phenotypes that reflect the underlying proteotype. Patients with alpha-synuclein disorders are particularly prone to hallucinations, delusions, and rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder. Patients with tauopathies manifest disproportionate disinhibition and apathy, and may exhibit compulsions. Alzheimer's disease is a triple proteinopathy with abnormalities of A-beta, tau, and alpha-synculein leading to a complex behavioral phenotype. This molecular approach to neuropsychiatry may assist in understanding the mechanisms of degenerative diseases, provide insight into the pathophysiology of neuropsychiatric symptoms, and contribute to monitoring disease-modifying therapies.
...
PMID:Toward a molecular neuropsychiatry of neurodegenerative diseases. 1289 66

Parkinson's disease is associated with classical Parkinsonian features that respond to dopaminergic therapy. Neuropsychiatric sequelae include dementia, major depression, dysthymia, anxiety disorders, sleep disorders, and sexual disorders. Panic attacks are particularly common. With treatment, visual hallucinations, paranoid delusions, mania, or delirium may evolve. Psychosis is a key factor in nursing home placement, and depression is the most significant predictor of quality of life. Clozapine may be the safest treatment for psychotic features, but more research is needed to establish the efficacy of antidepressant treatments. Dementia with Lewy bodies, the second most common dementia in the elderly, may present in association with systematized delusions, depression, or RBD. Early evidence suggests the utility of rivastigmine, donepezil, low-dose olanzapine, and quetiapine in treating DLB. Parkinson-plus syndromes generally lack a good response to dopaminergic treatment and evidence additional features, including dysautonomia, cerebellar and pontine features, eye signs, and other movement disorders. MSA is associated with dysautonomia and RBD. SND (MSA-P) is associated with frontal cognitive impairments, but dementia, psychosis, and mood disorders have not been strikingly apparent unless additional pathological findings are present. In SDS (MSA-A), impotence is almost ubiquitous; urinary incontinence is frequent; depression is occasional, and sleep apnea should be treated to avoid sudden death during sleep. OPCA neuropsychiatric correlates await further definition. Progressive supranuclear palsy neuropsychiatric features include apathy, subcortical dementia, pathological emotionality, mild depression and anxiety, and lack of appreciable response to donepezil. CBD usually is recognized by early frontal dementia with ideomotor apraxia, often in the right upper extremity, attended later by poorly responsive unilateral Parkinsonism, with additional signs including cortical reflex myoclonus, limb dystonia, alien limb, oculomotor apraxia when asked to look horizontally, depression, personality changes, and, occasionally, Kluver-Bucy syndrome. The neuropsychiatry of FTDP-17 involves apraxia, executive impairment, personality changes, hyperorality, and occasional psychosis. Future research in these Parkinsonian disorders should target the characterization of neuropsychiatric sequelae and their treatment.
...
PMID:The neuropsychiatry of Parkinson's disease and related disorders. 1555 Feb 93

Clinical criteria for DLB have been more and more accurate over time, and they had focused on psychotic symptoms for their high frequency. Recent literature suggests that behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD) are frequently associated with DLB, beyond the presence of psychosis. Notwithstanding, the occurrence of BPSD in DLB is under-investigated, and no data are available yet in the different stages. Aim of the present study was to evaluate BPSD pattern in the different stages of DLB, and characterize the relationship with both cognitive deficits and Parkinsonian signs. Ninety-two DLB patients were enrolled and were divided into mild (n=63, 68.5%) and moderate-severe (n=29, 31.5%) subgroups according to the severity of cognitive impairment. Considering the absence/presence of symptoms, anxiety was the most common BPSD (67.4%), followed by depression (61.9%), apathy (57.6%), agitation and sleep disorder (55.4%). Psychosis was present in half of the patients. These symptoms worsened over disease course and represented a core-feature of the disease. No association between BPSD severity and the degree of motor disability was found. These observations suggest that a careful and systematic evaluation of BPSD is mandatory for carefully characterizing disease-related features and for developing new therapeutic approaches. Knowledge of the specific weight of BPSD in DLB would contribute to improve the allocation of health resources for dementia and to a better management of the disease.
...
PMID:Behavioral and psychological symptoms in dementia with Lewy-bodies (DLB): frequency and relationship with disease severity and motor impairment. 1746 82

Few studies have compared neuropsychiatric disorders and functional abilities in the early stage of DLB and AD and their influence on caregiver distress. The aim of this study is to assess neuropsychiatric disorders, functional abilities and caregiver distress in DLB and in AD subjects. Sixteen subjects affected by probable DLB and 12 subjects affected by probable AD were enrolled. All subjects underwent a wide neuropsychological examination. Caregiver's distress was also assessed. Subjects affected by DLB performed better in long-term memory tests, whereas AD subjects performed better in attentive and executive function tests. The Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI) total score was significantly higher in DLB subjects than in AD subjects. Furthermore, DLB subjects scored worse than AD subjects in both Activities of Daily Living scale (ADL) and Instrumental Activities of Daily Living scale (IADL) scales. Overall caregiver distress was higher in DLB than in AD subjects. High distress was observed in DLB caregivers alone and was caused by delusion, hallucinations, anxiety and apathy. DLB subjects have a different neuropsychological profile, more psychiatric symptoms and more serious functional deficits than AD subjects in the early cognitive decline, furthermore DLB caregivers are more stressed than AD caregivers.
...
PMID:Clinical findings, functional abilities and caregiver distress in the early stage of dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) and Alzheimer's disease (AD). 1908 84

The core symptoms of different dementia subtypes are the behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD) and its neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPS). BPSD symptoms may occur at any stage in the case of dementia due to Alzheimer's disease (AD), whereas they tend to occur early on in the case of its behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia or dementia with Lewy bodies and are essential for diagnosis. BPSD treatment consists of non-pharmacological as well as pharmacological interventions, with non-pharmacological interactions being suggested as first-line treatment. Agitation, psychotic features, apathy, depression, and anxiety may not respond to acetylcholinesterase inhibitors or memantine in AD cases; therefore, antipsychotics, antidepressants, sedative drugs or anxiolytics, and antiepileptic drugs are typically prescribed. However, such management of BPSD can be complicated by hypersensitivity to antipsychotic drugs, as observed in DLB, and a lack of effective pro-cognitive treatment in the case of frontotemporal dementia. The present paper reviews current knowledge of the management of BPSD and its limitations and discusses on-going clinical trials and future therapeutic options.
...
PMID:Pharmacotherapy of Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms of Dementia: State of the Art and Future Progress. 3284 75