Articles: dementia.
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"I don't know" responses were recorded during administration of the Mini-Mental State Examination in elderly patients with primary degenerative dementia and primary major depression. More "I don't know" responses were given by patients with degenerative dementia; however, demented patients did not differ overall from depressives in the proportion of Not Correct responses consisting of "I don't know" responses. These responses were positively correlated with age and with Hollingshead education and social class scores in depressives but not in demented patients. A higher proportion of Not Correct responses consisting of "I don't know" responses needs to be demonstrated in depressive pseudomentia than in degenerative dementia if this clinical sign is to be used in helping to differentiate the two disorders.
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Psychiatr Neurol Med Psychol (Leipz) · Nov 1984
[Clinical and cisternographic differential diagnosis between presenile dementia and Hakim syndrome].
The authors compared with regard clinical and the radionuclide cisternography examination 27 patients with Hakim-Syndrome and 11 with Alzheimer-Disease. In all cases, dementia was a stable symptom. ⋯ Only in case of patients with Alzheimer-Disease we found aphasia, apraxia and psychotic disorders. 24 hours after the injection radionuclide cisternography showed ventricular retention and absence of parasagital accumulation only in patients with Hakim-Syndrome. Lighter changes (mixed cisternographic pattern) were found in patients with Alzheimer-Disease as well.
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The term "depressive pseudodementia" introduced 20 to 30 years ago by Madden and coworkers and by Kiloh is critically evaluated. This originally descriptive term is not unequivocal due to its diagnostic and therapeutic connotations. Even by omitting the negative prefix "pseudo" it cannot be distinguished whether a psychopathological description of symptoms or a clinical diagnosis is meant. ⋯ At the syndromal level it is suggested to use the term "dementia syndrome" according to Folstein and McHugh or to use the term "cognitive impairment" according to Caine. At the diagnostic-nosological level this procedure should include the information as to whether the "cognitive impairment" of an elderly patient coincides with a depression, a certain type of dementia or a combination of both. Such a positive terminology may promote the qualitative differentiation and quantification of the "cognitive impairment" which are scientifically necessary.