Snapshot A 68-year-old man is brought to his primary care provider by his daughter after getting lost while going to the grocery store by himself earlier in the week. This was the second time that he has gotten lost. She has also noticed that he is having difficulty remembering what was told to him. She has noticed him having trouble with memory for the past year and, until recently, has been unable to safely care for himself. He can no longer cook dinner because he frequently forgets to turn off the stove. He is otherwise healthy. Physical examination is normal. Laboratory testing is unremarkable. A Montreal Cognitive Assessment is 20 out of 30. Introduction Definition a neurodegenerative disorder that is characterized by cognitive decline e.g., dementia difficulty completing activities of daily living e.g., balancing a checkbook, buying groceries, and cooking psychiatric and behavioral issues Associated conditions decreased acetylcholine Down syndrome Epidemiology Incidence the most common cause of dementia Risk factors increasing age trisomy 21 due to amyloid precursor protein being found in chromosome 21 Etiology Sporadic (in 95% of cases) Apolipoprotein E (APOE) genotype APOE4 is associated with an increased risk of developing Alzheimer disease (AD) APOE2 is protective against AD Presenilin-1 (chromosome 14) and presenilin-2 (chromosome 1) increased risk of early onset AD Pathogenesis The cause is unclear; however, histopathology demonstrates extracellular amyloid plaques intraneuronal neurofibrillary tangles altered nucleus basalis of Meynert (a cholinergic nucleus) prominently affected Gross pathology hippocampal and temporal lobe atrophy hydrocephalus ex vacuo Presentation Symptoms impaired declarative episodic memory this is a memory of events that occurred in a specific time and place impaired ability to remember new pieces of information visuospatial and language deficits behavioral and psychological impairment apathy social isolation irritability Imaging MRI brain findings may demonstrate volume loss in the hippocampus and temporal lobe Studies A clinical diagnosis rule out reversible causes of dementia (e.g., vitamin B12 deficiency and hypothyroidism) cognitive testing Montreal Cognitive Assessment mini mental status exam Differential Normal pressure hydrocephalus differentiating factor dementia (wide-based), gait instability, and urinary incontinence diagnosed with improvement of gait after a lumbar puncture managed by a ventriculoperitoneal shunt Vascular dementia differentiating factor a step-wise cognitive decline in the setting of recent stroke significant vascular brain injury on brain imaging Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease differentiating factors rapidly progressive dementia with startle myoclonus presence of 14-3-3 protein in the cerebral spinal fluid Normal aging differentiating factors preservation of procedural, primary, and semantic memory decreased episodic and working memory decreased executive function Dementia with Lewy bodies differentiating factors visual hallucinations fluctuating cognition parkinsonism REM sleep disorder neuroleptic sensitivity Frontotemporal dementia differentiating factors disinhibition and apathy (in the behavioral variant) aphasia (in the primary progressive aphasia variant) Treatment Medical cholinesterase inhibitors indication increases cortical cholinergic function and typically used in mild-moderate AD recall that this disease is associated with decreased cortical acetycholine medications donepezil rivastigmine galantamine memantine indication neuroprotective N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist typically used in moderate-severe AD believed that neuronal excitotoxicity plays a role in the development of AD Complications Difficulty with eating or refusal to eat Infection