Articles: dementia.
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Case Reports
Prolonged, progressive dementia with spongiform encephalopathy: a variant of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease?
A 46-year-old female is described with prolonged, progressive dementia and a brain biopsy consistent with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD). She had neither myoclonic jerks nor an electroencephalogram with periodic spikes and suppression. ⋯ The nosology of CJD was discussed in the light of this case in which histopathology was characteristic of spongiform encephalopathy but the clinical features were atypical. We concluded that it would be premature to expand the traditional diagnostic criteria to include such cases as having CJD but, at the same time, it would be prudent to handle tissue, linens and surgical instruments as if they were contaminated by the resistant agent of CJD.
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A neurological outpatient department studied 323 consecutive referrals for suspected dementia: 135 (41.8%) were not demented. Of the patients 12.1% had diffuse cognitive disorder; 10.2% circumscribed memory disorder; 0.9% other circumscribed cognitive disorder, 14.2% psychiatric disorder, and 4.3% were judged to be normal. ⋯ Patients with specific cause were significantly younger than those with other causes of dementia. A potentially treatable cause was found in 10.7% of all demented patients, the most common being metabolic disorders, meningioma, hydrocephalus, subdural haematoma, and depressive pseudodementia.
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Comparative Study Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
[Efficacy and tolerance of long-term naftidrofuryl treatment of patients with senile dementia. Controlled study versus placebo].
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Although some researchers have suggested that the dexamethasone suppression test (DST) may be useful in differentiating between major depression and dementia in the elderly, recent reports of abnormal DST results in nondepressed, demented elderly have questioned the validity of the test in this population. This study compared the frequency of abnormal DST results in three groups of elderly inpatients: depressed/not demented; demented/not depressed; and depressed and demented. ⋯ In this sample, the DST was more likely to identify dementia than depression. Until further investigations clarify the parameters of DST use in the elderly, the diagnosis of depression and dementia should continue to be determined by sensitive interpretation of clinical findings, history, and other diagnostic tests.