
Best Dx/Best Rx: Alzheimer Disease
Alzheimer Disease
David S. Knopman, MD
Mayo Clinic
Definition/Key Clinical Features
Differential Diagnosis
Best Tests
Best Therapy
Best References
Definition
- The most common dementia in which the dominant initial
symptom is short-term memory impairment
- Slowly progressive disorder that eventually evolves
into a pervasive loss of most domains of intellectual function
Key Clinical Features
- Typically becomes symptomatic with complaints of forgetfulness
and confusion
- Progressive worsening of the following
- Short-term memory (specifically, an inability to
learn new information)
- Language
- Visuospatial processing
- Abstract reasoning and executive functioning
- Associated symptoms
- Apathy and loss of initiative
- Depression
- Incontinence (in advanced disease)
- Hallucinations and delusions (most often after initial
stages)
- Verbal and physical aggressiveness
Differential Diagnosis
- Subacute delirium caused by drug intoxications
- Major depression
- Metabolic disorders
- Hypothyroidism
- Vitamin B12 deficiency
- Thiamine deficiency
- Liver or renal failure
- Space-occupying lesions
- Vascular dementia
- Dementia with Lewy bodies
- Frontotemporal lobar degenerations
Best Tests
- Thorough history
- General physical exam
- Neurologic exam
- Mental status examination
- Laboratory tests used primarily to rule out other conditions,
though biomarkers are currently being developed
- MRI
- Good sensitivity but does not add to sensitivity of clinical diagnosis
- Excellent for ruling out other conditions, including space-occupying lesions and cerebral infarcts
- Hippocampal atrophy has best sensitivity and specificity
- CT
- Poor sensitivity
- Useful to eliminate space-occupying lesions such
as subdural hematomas or brain tumors that present as subacute dementia
- Most cost-effective for eliminating other disorders but not adequate to evaluate for coexistent cerebral infarcts
- Lumbar puncture
- Good sensitivity for biomarkers tau, abeta, and ADC7, but these do not add to sensitivity of clinical diagnosis
- Useful for eliminating CNS infections or meningeal
cancer that could present as subacute dementia
- Routine CSF unremarkable
- EEG
- No value for diagnosis
- Useful for eliminating seizures as a cause of cognitive
impairment
- Normal pattern or nonspecific changes
- Genotyping
- Good sensitivity for APOE but does not add to sensitivity of clinical diagnosis
- Specificity of APOE genotype good but not sufficiently specific
- APOE genotyping is commercially available.
- Genotyping for APP, PS1, and PS2
mutations should be limited to young-onset cases with strong family history
of early onset
Best Therapy
- Currently available agents are palliative but may have
clinically valuable benefits for some patients by delaying progression of
symptoms of cognitive loss
- No proven preventive therapies
- No agents consistently effective in preventing progression
- Avoid drugs with anticholinergic effects
- Coping strategies and education regarding genetic susceptibility
important for patient and family
Cholinesterase Inhibitors
- Donepezil
- Efficacy equivalent to others
- Dose: 5–10 mg/d
- Cost/mo (maximum dose): $127.99
- Galantamine
- Twice-a-day dosing
- Efficacy equivalent to others
- Dose: 8–24 mg/d
- Cost/mo (maximum dose): $131.98
- Rivastigmine
- Twice-a-day dosing
- Efficacy equivalent to others
- Dose: 3–12 mg/d
- Cost/mo (maximum dose): $133.98
Best References
Doody, et al: Neurology 56:1154, 2001
Knopman, et al: Neurology 56:1143, 2001
Petersen, et al: Neurology
56:1133, 2001
Small, et al: JAMA 278:1363, 1997
July 2004
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