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- IRMS - Nicolae Testemitanu SUMPh
- REVISTE MEDICALE NEINSTITUȚIONALE
- One Health & Risk Management
- One Health & Risk Management 2021
- One Health & Risk Management Vol. 2 No 4, 2021 Supplement
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12710/18303
Title: | A comparative clinical picture of dementia |
Authors: | Cotelea, Valeria |
Keywords: | dementia;risk factors;protection factors;pathogenesis;depression;delirium |
Issue Date: | 2021 |
Publisher: | Asociația de Biosiguranță și Biosecuritate din Republica Moldova |
Citation: | COTELEA, Valeria. A comparative clinical picture of dementia. In: One Health & Risk Management. 2021, vol. 2(suppl.), no 4, p. 33. ISSN 2587-3466. |
Abstract: | Introduction. The prevalence of dementia is increasing in our population, which is aging
at an alarming rate. Due to the heterogeneity of the clinical presentation and the complexity of the neuropathology of the disease, the classifications of dementia remain controversial, and the number of people diagnosed does not correspond, even remotely, with reality.
About 47 million people live with dementia globally; by 2050, there will be an almost threefold increase to about 131 million people with dementia. Also, the costs for the diagnosis,
treatment and post-treatment surveillance of dementia for the health system and the economy are significant. The clinical picture of dementia is quite diverse. Therefore, it is necessary to learn how to relate its different symptoms and syndromes, characteristics and specificity in different nosologies.
Material and methods. The present work studied 42 materials and literature sources
from the Medscape, PubMed and EBSCO databases in terms of clinical manifestations,
symptoms and syndromes of dementia (2013-2021). Most of the used literature sources
refer to the last years of publication (2016-2021). The methods of study were as follows:
1. The clinical-descriptive method of the main symptoms, syndromes, 2. The comparative clinical analysis of the symptoms of dementia, 3. The specific clinical features, 4. The differential diagnosis between different types of dementia, 5. The 4 most common dementia
types, 6. Dementia in different nosologies, 7. The most common conditions viz. depression
and delirium, should be differentiated from dementia in the first place. Major attention was
paid to the comparative characteristics and clinical manifestations of different types of dementia in various pathologies, to the point of specific features of dementia. A comparative
clinical picture of deep cognitive changes and development was studied according to the
REIBERG scale for dementia. There were applied current classifications of dementia: DSMV, ICD-X, ICD-11. The scientific novelty of the work is provided by the use of ICD-11 in the
description of the criteria for the diagnosis of dementia.
Results. The paper lists the risk factors, protection factors and pathogenesis of dementia.
The study results provided a generalization of specific symptoms and syndromes in the
most common 4 types of dementia: 1. Dementia in Alzheimer’s Disease, 2. Lewy Body Dementia, 3. Vascular Dementia, 4. Frontotemporal Dementia, as well as dementia occurring
in other nosologies. Comparative differential criteria for the diagnosis of dementia and
other underlying conditions which are difficult to differentiate from dementia viz. depression and delirium were also studied.
Conclusions. Failure to recognize dementia syndromes remains common. Different types
of dementia require different approaches and management. From a long list of differential
diagnoses of dementia, four common types should come to mind (Alzheimer's disease, vascular dementia, Lewy body dementia and frontotemporal dementia) just by taking patient’s family history, physical examination and checking the patient’s behavioral status.
Dementia should be differentiated from the most common conditions like depression and
delirium by nosology, clinical presentation, prevailing symptoms and syndromes. |
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: | One Health & Risk Management: The National Scientific Conference with international participation ”ONE HEALTH” approach in a changing world |
URI: | https://journal.ohrm.bba.md/index.php/journal-ohrm-bba-md/issue/view/17/18 http://repository.usmf.md/handle/20.500.12710/18303 |
ISSN: | 2587-3466 2587-3458 |
Appears in Collections: | One Health & Risk Management Vol. 2 No 4, 2021 Supplement
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