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Navigating Alzheimer’s pathology, symptoms, and treatment planning

Understand Alzheimer’s pathology through symptom recognition, physiological abnormalities, and treatment selection from Dr. Dylan Wint’s lecture on AudioDigest®.

Anyone on the caregiving end of Alzheimer’s dementia (AD) knows that the disease can be heartbreaking, filled with challenges for patients and loved ones alike. Clinically, AD — the most common form of dementia — is equally difficult to navigate.

That’s because by the time someone shows cognitive decline, the underlying damage has already begun, sometimes even 10 to 20 years earlier. As a result, behavioral symptoms together with imaging may be the better predictor of AD. Experts are working hard to redefine the diagnostic toolkit so that providers can intervene more quickly. 

Recently, an AudioDigest® lecture by Dylan Wint, MD explored these topics and more for providers in gerontology, psychiatry, neurology, family medicine, primary care, and internal medicine. As Director of the Cleveland Clinic’s Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health in Las Vegas, Dr. Wint has direct experience treating and diagnosing Alzheimer’s patients and provides several key evidence-based best practices in his 47-minute audio session. 

In this article, we briefly summarize Dr. Wint’s lecture — but you won’t want to miss the full session. For access to this and other psychiatry education content as well as a free one-minute audio sample, visit the “Alzheimer Dementia” course page. 

Understanding Alzheimer’s pathology through diagnostic imaging 

Dr. Wint begins his session with an overview of the pathology of AD, noting that the condition is typically marked by inflammation and cellular death. Specific markers include intercellular amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles of hyperphosphorylated tau protein. Synaptic and neuronal dysfunction leads to mild and nonspecific symptoms of Alzheimer’s Disease; over time, patients progress to Alzheimer’s dementia.

Because this pathology can happen years before the effects are evident, diagnostic imaging can help detect changes in earlier stages. Such tools may include magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), which can show disproportionate atrophy in the mesial temporal and parietal lobes. Fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography (PET) can also show bilateral parietal hypometabolism, often extending into the temporal lobes. 

Two other diagnostic measures can help detect pathologic changes of AD, but may not be covered by Medicare or other insurers, Dr. Wint says: 

  • Spinal fluid analysis can show decreased β-amyloid and increased phosphorylated tau protein with a high degree of sensitivity and specificity using amyloid-to-tau ratios. 
  • Amyloid-detecting PET can detect the type of amyloid present in AD. 

Spotting Alzheimer’s symptoms 

Signs of AD include cognitive, psychiatric and behavioral symptoms. While all three categories can affect a patient’s quality of life, Dr. Wint emphasizes that the latter two can disproportionally drive healthcare costs, institutionalization, and caregiver stress. Behavioral and psychiatric concerns may also present before cognitive problems. 

“Although cognitive symptoms define the disease, behavioral symptoms really generate much of the misery of the condition,” Dr. Wint says. 

  • Behavioral symptoms include irritability, apathy, and depression. These symptoms may happen in conjunction or independently — such as when a patient experiences irritability, but not depression. Conversely, patients sometimes express elation, agitation, and anxiety. 
  • Psychiatric symptoms include delusions and hallucinations and may be associated with faster cognitive decline and impairment of activities of daily living (ADL). 
  • Cognitive symptoms include forgetfulness that happens quickly and completely, such as when patients say information was never given to them. AD patients may also have trouble tracking time, become lost in familiar places or misplace things.  

Unfortunately, the pathologic changes of AD mean that providers can’t always trust patients to reliably self-report. Alternative assessments such as the SIGECAPS (sleep disorder, interest deficit, guilt, energy and concentration deficit, appetite disorder, psychomotor retardation or agitation, and suicidality) score can help. 

Additionally, clinicians should be careful not to misdiagnose other problems as AD. For example, issues with gait, balance, or posture in someone with memory and cognitive issues may not be associated with AD.  

Managing Alzheimer’s dementia 

As Dr. Wint explains, treatments for AD can include both nonpharmacologic and pharmacologic options: 

  • Nonpharmacologic: Identifying and minimizing causal factors, such as medications, sleep deprivation, and environmental issues; increasing ambient lighting and inputs; and providing patients ongoing information about the people around them and other details to minimize ambiguities. 
  • Pharmacologic: Medications for dementia include olanzapine (5 mg) and risperidone (2 mg). Patients with certain behavioral symptoms may benefit from quetiapine (agitation) or aripiprazole (agitation and psychosis). However, given the risks of antipsychotic agents among older patients — including stroke or sudden death — durations of these medications should be minimized.

Listen and learn more 

AD can affect patient and caregiver quality of life and is particularly tough to diagnose given that damage can happen years before symptoms. In addition to assessing non-cognitive symptoms such as depression or psychosis, clinicians can rely on radiological findings in their diagnostic workups to start management plans as soon as possible.  

The bottom line: Don’t always rely on cognitive decline to recognize Alzheimer’s. There may be more to the story.

Listen to Dr. Wint's full insights on AudioDigest.

Read More To Recognize Symptoms Of Dementia In Alzheimer’s
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