what are normal, age-associated cognitive changes?
what is the definition of mild cognitive impairment (MCI)?
what is amnestic MCI?
memory loss not meeting criteria for dementia
what is the DSM-IV diagnostic criteria for dementia (DSM-5 is neurocognitive disorder, mild/major)
early onset AD
occurs between 30-60 yo
late onset AD
most common form
what does AD look like grossly?
cerebral atrophy, especially affecting temporal, parietal, and frontal areas, with ventricular enlargement
what does AD look like microscopically?
what are the steps to forming the APP molecule?
pathologic cleavage by beta and gamma secretases
what is the difference between neuritic plaques and diffuse plaques?
neuritic: larger, with dark brown center (represents 42 APP seed)
diffuse: smaller, don’t have brown center (40 APP)
what does cerebral amyloid angiopathy look like?
smooth muscle of vessels has been replaced by amyloid
-may cause hemorrhage and more vascular dementia
what is the major component of neurofibrillary tangles?
hyperphosphorylated tau (microtubule-associated protein) -dissociates from microtubules and assembles to form paired helical filaments, which are bundled together to form NFTs and neuropil threads (periphery of plaques)
describe what granulovascular degeneration and Hirano bodies are
nonspecific features of AD observed in hippocampi
-also in regular brains, so not important diagnostically
what is the difference between FTLD-Tau and FTLD-TDP?
both have profound anterior frontal and superior temporal knife-edge atrophy (parietal and occipital are spared)
-eccentric asymmetrical nuclei
what are vulnerable neurons in AD? the cytopathology?
hippocampus, entorhinal cortex, neocortex, basal forebrain cholinergic system
-NFT, neurites, A-beta deposition, and other cellular abnormalities
which are more diagnostic and which come sooner between A-beta plaques and tau proteins?
A-beta come sooner, but tau proteins are more diagnostic
what are AD risk factors?
what are the 3 key features of AD?
what are early cognitive symptoms of AD?
what are early functional symptoms of AD?
what are early behavioral symptoms of AD?
how does primary depression differ from dementia?
why is it important to diagnose AD early?
brain imaging in regards to AD?
not routinely indicated, but consider if:
nonspecific findings are common in AD, vascular dementia:
-lacunar infarcts, small vessel changes, white matter disease