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Lewy Body Dementia

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Lewy Body Dementia

NINDS Dementia With Lewy Bodies Information Page

"Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) is one of the most common types of progressive dementia. The central feature of DLB is progressive cognitive decline, combined with three additional defining features: (1) pronounced “fluctuations” in alertness and attention, such as frequent drowsiness, lethargy, lengthy periods of time spent staring into space, or disorganized speech; (2) recurrent visual hallucinations, and (3) parkinsonian motor symptoms, such as rigidity and the loss of spontaneous movement. People may also suffer from depression. The symptoms of DLB are caused by the build-up of Lewy bodies – accumulated bits of alpha-synuclein protein -- inside the nuclei of neurons in areas of the brain that control particular aspects of memory and motor control. … The similarity of symptoms between DLB and Parkinson’s disease, and between DLB and Alzheimer’s disease, can often make it difficult for a doctor to make a definitive diagnosis. In addition, Lewy bodies are often also found in the brains of people with Parkinson's and Alzheimer’s diseases. These findings suggest that either DLB is related to these other causes of dementia or that an individual can have both diseases at the same time. DLB usually occurs sporadically, in people with no known family history of the disease."

Highlighted Article

Dementia with lewy bodies. (Semin Neurol. 2007)

"The presentation of DLB is typically one of cortical and subcortical cognitive impairments, with worse visuospatial and executive dysfunction than Alzheimer's disease. There may be relative sparing of memory especially in the early stages. Core clinical features of DLB include fluctuating attention, recurrent visual hallucinations, and parkinsonism. Suggestive features include REM sleep behavior disorder, severe neuroleptic sensitivity, and low dopamine transporter uptake in the basal ganglia on functional neuroimaging. Additional supportive features that commonly occur in DLB, but with lower specificity, include repeated falls and syncope, transient, unexplained loss of consciousness, severe autonomic dysfunction, hallucinations in other modalities, systematized delusions, depression, relative preservation of medial temporal lobe structures on structural neuroimaging, reduced occipital activity on functional neuroimaging, prominent slow wave activity on electroencephalogram, and low uptake myocardial scintigraphy."

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Lewy Body Dementia

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Common inflammatory mechanisms in Lewy body disease and Alzheimer disease. (J Neuropathol Exp Neurol. 2007)

Dementia with lewy bodies. (Semin Neurol. 2007) " Synucleinopathies, with and without dementia, encompass a wide range of diseases including Parkinson's disease, multiple system atrophy, rapid eye movement (REM) sleep behavior disorder, and dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB). DLB is a neurodegenerative disorder resulting in slowly progressive and unrelenting dementia until death. Prevalence studies suggest that it is the second most common dementing illness in the elderly. The neuropathologic findings of DLB show a wide anatomic range. Lewy bodies and Lewy-related pathology are found from the brain stem to the cortex and, in many cases, associated with concurrent Alzheimer's disease pathology."

In dementia with Lewy bodies, Braak stage determines phenotype, not Lewy body distribution (NEUROLOGY 2007)

[Lewy body dementia and Parkinson disease dementia.] (Presse Med. 2007)

Lewy body variant of Alzheimer's disease or cerebral type Lewy body disease? Two autopsy cases of presenile onset with minimal involvement of the brainstem (Neuropathology 2007) "T hese findings suggest that: (i) in at least some LBV/AD cases, the amygdala develops neuronal loss and Lewy-related pathology prior to the brainstem nuclei; and (ii) the depletion of nerves in the heart tissue of LBV/AD is not necessarily complete despite the development of Lewy-related pathology."

Patients With Dementia With Lewy Bodies Have More Impaired Quality of Life Than Patients With Alzheimer Disease. (Alzheimer Dis Assoc Disord. 2007)

[Respiratory chemosensitivity in dementia with Lewy bodies] (Nihon Kokyuki Gakkai Zasshi. 2007) "In DLB, autonomic dysfunction, such as sleep disorders, and cardiopulmonary arrest, together with unconsciousness, can occur. Such cases have poor prognosis and may have dysfunction of chemosensitivity in the respiratory center. … patients with DLB had a subnormal hypercapnic response in chemosensitivity of the respiratory center, suggesting dysfunction of the respiratory center. Respiratory center dysfunction may be related to cardiopulmonary arrest together with unconsciousness, so, patients with DLB should not use drugs affecting the respiratory center."

 

 

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