Motor and cognitive function in Lewy body dementia: comparison with Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases.
TL;DR: EPS in Lewy body dementia resemble those seen in idiopathic Parkinson's disease, although less rest tremor and left/right asymmetry but more severe rigidity favours a diagnosis of LewyBody dementia.
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Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Motor and cognitive function were compared in patients with Lewy body dementia, Parkinson's disease, or Alzheimer's disease, to identify features that may be clinically useful in differentiating Lewy body dementia from Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease. METHODS: A range of neuropsychological function and extrapyrimidal signs (EPS) was assessed in 16 patients with Lewy body dementia, 15 with Parkinson's disease, 25 with Alzheimer's disease, and 22 control subjects. RESULTS: The severity of total motor disability scores increased in the following order: controls approximately = Alzheimer's disease << Parkinson's disease < Lewy body dementia. Compared with patients with Parkinson's disease, patients with Lewy body dementia had greater scores for rigidity and deficits in the finger tapping test, but rest tremor and left/right asymmetry in EPS were more evident in Parkinson's disease. Patients with Lewy body dementia were also less likely to present with left/right asymmetry in EPS at the onset of their parkinsonism. "Sensitivity" to neuroleptic drugs was noted in 33% of patients with Lewy body dementia. Alzheimer's disease and Lewy body dementia groups had greater severity of dementia compared with the Parkinson's disease group and controls. Neuropsychological evaluation disclosed severe but similar degrees of impaired performances in tests of attention (digit span), frontal lobe function (verbal fluency, category, and Nelson card sort test) and motor sequencing in both Lewy body dementia and Alzheimer's disease groups, than Parkinson's disease and controls. In the clock face test, improved performance was noted in the "copy" compared to "draw" part of the test in controls, patients with Alzheimer's disease, and those with Parkinson's disease, but not in the patients with Lewy body dementia, who achieved equally poor scores in both parts of the test. CONCLUSIONS: EPS in Lewy body dementia resemble those seen in idiopathic Parkinson's disease, although less rest tremor and left/right asymmetry but more severe rigidity favours a diagnosis of Lewy body dementia. The unique profile of patients with Lewy body dementia seen in the clock face test suggests that this simple and easy to administer test may be useful in the clinical setting to differentiate Lewy body dementia and Alzheimer's disease.
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Prevalence and characteristics of dementia in Parkinson disease: an 8-year prospective study.
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Dementia With Lewy Bodies
Ian G. McKeith
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TL;DR: The current state of scientific knowledge on DLB is reviewed to show that treatment with cholinesterase inhibitors is well tolerated by most patients and substantially improves cognitive and neuropsychiatric symptoms.
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Walking is more like catching than tapping: gait in the elderly as a complex cognitive task
Jeffrey M. Hausdorff,Jeffrey M. Hausdorff,Jeffrey M. Hausdorff,Galit Yogev,Galit Yogev,Shmuel Springer,Shmuel Springer,Ely S. Simon,Nir Giladi,Nir Giladi +9 more
TL;DR: It is found that among older adults, routine walking has more in common with complex motor tasks, like catching a moving object, than it does with tapping, and this underscores the interconnectedness of gait and cognitive function.
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Verbal fluency deficits in Parkinson's disease: a meta-analysis.
TL;DR: Demented and non-demented PD patients differ quantitatively but not qualitatively in terms of the relative prominence of deficits on tests of phonemic and semantic fluency, but patients with dementia of the Alzheimer's type and dementedPD patients can be differentiated from one another by the relative magnitude of deficits upon these two measures.
References
Clock drawing as an assessment tool for dementia.
TL;DR: Although the scoring system did not differentiate between various dementing disorders in the command condition, if clock drawing is used as a screening instrument, lack of improvement in the copy condition in comparison to thecommand condition may be a sign of a vascular involvement.
Evidence of a monoaminergic-cholinergic imbalance related to visual hallucinations in Lewy body dementia.
Elaine K. Perry,Elizabeth F. Marshall,Janet Kerwin,Carthage J. Smith,S. Jabeen,Anthony V. Cheng,Robert H. Perry +6 more
TL;DR: Results suggest that an imbalance between monaminergic and cholinergic transmitters is involved in hallucinogenesis in the human brain.
Neurotransmitters in basal ganglia and cortex of Alzheimer's disease with and without Lewy bodies
TL;DR: Reductions in basal ganglia dopamine and HVA suggest that LBV cases have a level of dopamine depletion similar to Parkinson's disease (PD), which may have contributed to the absence of resting tremor and the milder presentation of parkinsonian features in this group compared with classic PD.
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