Medicine
Volume 36, Issue 9 , Pages 467-470, September 2008

Dementia

Clive Holmes MRCPsych PhD is Professor of Biological Psychiatry at the University of Southampton, Southampton, UK. His research training was in the neurochemistry of Alzheimer's disease at the Institute of Neurology. This was followed by a PhD in the genetics of the neuropsychiatric features of Alzheimer's disease at the Institute of Psychiatry. Competing interests: none declared

Abstract 

Dementia is a general term for a number of progressive, organic brain diseases affecting around half a million people in England alone. Most neurodegenerative diseases that lead to dementia are characterized by processes that result in the aberrant polymerization of proteins, and a proportion of subjects with these diseases develop dementia as a direct result of the presence of mutations or polymorphisms in genes that influence these processes. The most common cause of dementia, and the best studied, is Alzheimer’s disease. Other important causes include vascular dementia; dementia with Lewy bodies and frontotemporal dementia. Management of dementia is largely focussed on helping carers to cope with the increase in physical dependence of patients as the disease progresses or with the emergence of troublesome neuropsychiatric symptoms. Current pharmacological treatments are based on the neurochemical changes that are found in these diseases. Cholinesterase inhibitors offer some help in ameliorating the inevitable cognitive decline found in Alzheimer’s disease and may have some role in the treatment of dementia with Lewy bodies. However, the treatment of neuropsychiatric symptoms in dementia is still largely empirical and is hampered by either limited efficacy or troublesome side effects.

Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease, cognitive deficits, dementia, frontotemporal dementia, Lewy body dementia, vascular dementia

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PII: S1357-3039(08)00204-1

doi:10.1016/j.mpmed.2008.07.006

Medicine
Volume 36, Issue 9 , Pages 467-470, September 2008