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Behavioral and psychological signs and symptoms of dementia: a practicing psychiatrist's viewpoint

Alzheimer's disease typically presents with two often overlapping syndromes, one cognitive, the other behavioral. The behavioral syndrome is characterized by psychosis, aggression, depression, anxiety, agitation, and other common if less well-defined symptoms subsumed under the umbrella entity...

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Autores principales: E. Mintzer, Jacobo, F. Mirski, Dario, S. Hoernig, Kathleen
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Les Laboratoires Servier 2000
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3181597/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22034243
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author E. Mintzer, Jacobo
F. Mirski, Dario
S. Hoernig, Kathleen
author_facet E. Mintzer, Jacobo
F. Mirski, Dario
S. Hoernig, Kathleen
author_sort E. Mintzer, Jacobo
collection PubMed
description Alzheimer's disease typically presents with two often overlapping syndromes, one cognitive, the other behavioral. The behavioral syndrome is characterized by psychosis, aggression, depression, anxiety, agitation, and other common if less well-defined symptoms subsumed under the umbrella entity “behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia” (BPSD), itself divided into a number of subsyndromes: psychosis, circadian rhythm (sleepwake) disturbance, depression, anxiety, and agitation, it is BPSD with its impact on care providers that ultimately precipitates the chain of events resulting in long-term institutional care. The treatment challenge involves eliminating unmet medical needs (undiagnosed hip fracture and asymptomatic urinary tract infection or pneumonia). Pharmacologic intervention relies on risperidone and, increasingly cholinesterase inhibitors for the control of psychosis (but with response rates of only 65% at tolerable doses), olanzapine and risperidone for anxiety, and carbamazepine and valproic acid for agitation. However, evidence increasingly favors nonpharmacologic interventions, to the extent that these should now be considered as the foundation of BPSD treatment. Problem behaviors are viewed as meaningful responses to unmet needs in the therapeutic milieu. Because the progression and impact of BPSD varies between patients, interventions must be explored, designed, implemented, and assessed on an individual basis. They include: family support and education, psychotherapy reality orientation, validation therapy, reminiscence and life review, behavioral interventions, therapeutic activities and creative arts therapies, environmental considerations (including restraint-free facilities), behavioral intensive care units, and workplace design and practices that aid the ongoing management of professional caregiver stress.
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spelling pubmed-31815972011-10-27 Behavioral and psychological signs and symptoms of dementia: a practicing psychiatrist's viewpoint E. Mintzer, Jacobo F. Mirski, Dario S. Hoernig, Kathleen Dialogues Clin Neurosci Clinical Research Alzheimer's disease typically presents with two often overlapping syndromes, one cognitive, the other behavioral. The behavioral syndrome is characterized by psychosis, aggression, depression, anxiety, agitation, and other common if less well-defined symptoms subsumed under the umbrella entity “behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia” (BPSD), itself divided into a number of subsyndromes: psychosis, circadian rhythm (sleepwake) disturbance, depression, anxiety, and agitation, it is BPSD with its impact on care providers that ultimately precipitates the chain of events resulting in long-term institutional care. The treatment challenge involves eliminating unmet medical needs (undiagnosed hip fracture and asymptomatic urinary tract infection or pneumonia). Pharmacologic intervention relies on risperidone and, increasingly cholinesterase inhibitors for the control of psychosis (but with response rates of only 65% at tolerable doses), olanzapine and risperidone for anxiety, and carbamazepine and valproic acid for agitation. However, evidence increasingly favors nonpharmacologic interventions, to the extent that these should now be considered as the foundation of BPSD treatment. Problem behaviors are viewed as meaningful responses to unmet needs in the therapeutic milieu. Because the progression and impact of BPSD varies between patients, interventions must be explored, designed, implemented, and assessed on an individual basis. They include: family support and education, psychotherapy reality orientation, validation therapy, reminiscence and life review, behavioral interventions, therapeutic activities and creative arts therapies, environmental considerations (including restraint-free facilities), behavioral intensive care units, and workplace design and practices that aid the ongoing management of professional caregiver stress. Les Laboratoires Servier 2000-06 /pmc/articles/PMC3181597/ /pubmed/22034243 Text en Copyright: © 2000 LLS http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Clinical Research
E. Mintzer, Jacobo
F. Mirski, Dario
S. Hoernig, Kathleen
Behavioral and psychological signs and symptoms of dementia: a practicing psychiatrist's viewpoint
title Behavioral and psychological signs and symptoms of dementia: a practicing psychiatrist's viewpoint
title_full Behavioral and psychological signs and symptoms of dementia: a practicing psychiatrist's viewpoint
title_fullStr Behavioral and psychological signs and symptoms of dementia: a practicing psychiatrist's viewpoint
title_full_unstemmed Behavioral and psychological signs and symptoms of dementia: a practicing psychiatrist's viewpoint
title_short Behavioral and psychological signs and symptoms of dementia: a practicing psychiatrist's viewpoint
title_sort behavioral and psychological signs and symptoms of dementia: a practicing psychiatrist's viewpoint
topic Clinical Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3181597/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22034243
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