00:00
Now, let's turn to a case. This is a 74-year-old who presents with cognitive dysfunction.
00:07
The patient and family reports 3-5 years of progressive memory loss and executive
dysfunction. This first began about 5 years ago when the patient began to have
difficulty with remembering new things like dates, names. Would forget keys,
directions, and have difficulty with driving. Over the past few years, the patient has
increasingly withdrawn from friends and other social activities as memory loss has
progressed. The patient no longer assists with finances and over the past year
there has been a concern with cooking and baking and safety around the home.
00:41
And so these tasks are now done primarily by the patient's family. On exam,
the patient is alert, awake, oriented to location and to being in the hospital clinic.
00:54
The patient had significant memory impairment, registering 3/3 items with
immediate recall so there we asked the patient to remember 3 items and asked
them immediately and this patient is able to register those items, but is only able to
recall 1/3 at 5 minutes. So this is a problem with short-term memory. The patient is
able to name objects and is fluent and follows commands. There is no aphasia.
01:19
The patient has reduced attention and concentration, frontal lobe tasks that are
impaired, and is unable to report the months of the year backwards. There is
reduced overall fund of knowledge. There are no other remarkable findings and no
other focal deficits on exam. So what's the most likely diagnosis in this patient?
Is his Alzheimer's disease frontotemporal dementia, Lewy body dementia, or mild
cognitive impairment? Well, this is not the typical presentation of frontotemporal
dementia. Frontotemporal dementia affects primarily the frontal lobes, the
temporal lobes, and behavior function. We see symptoms of speech aphasia,
speech dysfunction, semantic dementia and behavioral changes which are not
prominent in this case. This is not the typical description of Lewy body dementia.
02:11
Patients with Lewy body dementia present with cognitive dysfunction often
subcortical dysfunction as well as early Parkinsonism which we don't have on
exam or by report for this patient. This is not mild cognitive impairment. The
patient's cognitive dysfunction is significantly affecting their daily function.
02:29
They have retracted from social activities or no longer working and now there is a
concern about cooking, baking, and safety in the home. This is a typical
presentation of a patient with Alzheimer's disease.