The Practitioner
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There has been a rapid rise in the number of people diagnosed with dementia in England from 232,000 in 2008 to 850,000 in 2014. Currently, it is estimated that the prevalence of mild cognitive impairment in adults aged 65 and over is 10-20%. It is likely that this figure will increase in line with trends in dementia diagnosis. In some cases, mild cognitive impairment may be a prodrome for dementia, and my be caused by any of the dementia pathology subtypes. The relationship between depression in the elderly and mild cognitive impairment is difficult to tease out as they are frequently comorbid conditions and both have been found to be independent risk factors for subsequent dementia: about 10% convert to dementia each year, compared with 1-2% of the general elderly population. It is important to obtain a history of cognitive changes over time, as well as information about the onset and nature of cognitive symptoms, confirmed by a reliable informant, if available. To confirm the diagnosis objective evidence of cognitive impairment is required. However, there are no specific neuropsychological tests for patients with mild cognitive impairment. On neuropsychological tests, individuals with mild cognitive impairment typically score 1-15 SD below the mean for their age and education, although these ranges are guidelines and not cut-off scores. GPs should consider referring people who signs of mild cognitive impairment for assessment by specialist memory assessment services to aid early identification of dementia, because more than 50% of people with mild cognitive impairment later develop dementia.
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Alopecia areata is a chronic inflammatory non-scarring condition affecting the hair follicle that leads to hair loss ranging from small well defined patches to complete loss of all body hair. In about 80% of affected individuals there is spontaneous regrowth within a year. It can present at any age, although 60% of patients develop their first episode of hair loss before the age of 20. ⋯ Close examination of the periphery of a lesion with a magnifying glass will often reveal short hairs which taper in diameter from their tip to the point at which they emerge from the skin. These 'exclamation mark' hairs are diagnostic of alopecia areata. Individuals with alopecia areata should be referred for dermatological advice if there is diagnostic uncertainty, they have extensive hair loss, they are suffering severe psychological distress or they would like a wig.
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Cluster headache is a strictly unilateral headache that occurs in association with cranial autonomic features. Although it can begin at any age, the most common age of onset is in the third or fourth decade of life. The diagnosis is purely clinical and it is therefore crucial to take a good history looking for its distinctive features. ⋯ The majority of patients will have episodic cluster headache with recurrent bouts separated by remission periods of more than a month. The remaining 10-20% have chronic cluster headache and no significant remission periods over the course of a year. Specialist advice should be sought at first presentation for confirmation of diagnosis, development of a plan for managing current and future cluster bouts and where first-line treatments fail.