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Vascular dementia by Pharmacytimess |
Overview
Vascular dementia is a general term describing
problems with reasoning, planning, judgment, memory and other thought processes
caused by brain damage from impaired blood flow to your brain.
You can develop vascular dementia after a
stroke blocks an artery in your brain, but strokes don't always cause vascular dementia. Whether a stroke affects your thinking and reasoning depends on your
stroke's severity and location. Vascular dementia can also result from other conditions
that damage blood vessels and reduce circulation, depriving your brain of vital
oxygen and nutrients.
Factors that increase your risk of heart
disease and stroke — including diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol
and smoking — also raise your vascular dementia risk. Controlling these factors
may help lower your chances of developing vascular dementia.
Symptoms
Vascular dementia symptoms vary, depending on
the part of your brain where blood flow is impaired. Symptoms often overlap
with those of other types of dementia, especially Alzheimer's disease dementia.
But unlike Alzheimer's disease, the most significant symptoms of vascular
dementia tend to involve speed of thinking and problem-solving rather than
memory loss.
Vascular dementia signs and symptoms include:
·
Confusion
·
Trouble paying
attention and concentrating
·
Reduced ability to
organize thoughts or actions
·
Decline in ability to
analyze a situation, develop an effective plan and communicate that plan to
others
·
Slowed thinking
·
Difficulty with
organization
·
Difficulty deciding
what to do next
·
Problems with memory
·
Restlessness and
agitation
·
Unsteady gait
·
Sudden or frequent
urge to urinate or inability to control passing urine
·
Depression or apathy
Vascular dementia symptoms may be most
clear-cut when they occur suddenly following a stroke. When changes in your
thinking and reasoning seem clearly linked to a stroke, this condition is
sometimes called post-stroke dementia.
Sometimes a characteristic pattern of vascular
dementia symptoms follows a series of strokes or ministrokes. Changes in your
thought processes occur in noticeable steps downward from your previous level
of function, unlike the gradual, steady decline that typically occurs in
Alzheimer's disease dementia.
But vascular dementia can also develop very
gradually, just like Alzheimer's disease dementia. What's more, vascular
disease and Alzheimer's disease often occur together.
Studies show that many people with dementia
and evidence of brain vascular disease also have Alzheimer's disease.
Causes
Vascular dementia results from conditions that
damage your brain's blood vessels, reducing their ability to supply your brain
with the amounts of nutrition and oxygen it needs to perform thought processes
effectively.
Common conditions that may lead to vascular
dementia include:
·
Stroke
(infarction) blocking a brain artery. Strokes that block a brain artery usually cause a range of
symptoms that may include vascular dementia. But some strokes don't cause any
noticeable symptoms. These silent strokes still increase dementia risk.
With both silent and apparent strokes, the risk of vascular
dementia increases with the number of strokes that occur over time. One type of
vascular dementia involving many strokes is called multi-infarct dementia.
·
Brain
hemorrhage. Often caused by
high blood pressure weakening a blood vessel leading to bleeding into the brain
causing damage or from buildup of protein in small blood vessels occurring with
aging weakening them over time (cerebral amyloid angiopathy)
·
Narrowed
or chronically damaged brain blood vessels. Conditions that narrow or inflict long-term damage on your
brain blood vessels also can lead to vascular dementia. These conditions
include the wear and tear associated with aging, high blood pressure, abnormal
aging of blood vessels (atherosclerosis), diabetes
Risk factors
In general, the risk factors for vascular dementia are the same as those for heart disease and stroke. Risk factors for
vascular dementia include:
·
Increasing
age. Your risk of
vascular dementia rises as you grow older. The disorder is rare before age 65,
and the risk rises substantially by your 90s.
·
History
of heart attacks, strokes or ministrokes. If you've had a heart attack, you may be at increased risk
of having blood vessel problems in your brain. The brain damage that occurs
with a stroke or a ministroke (transient ischemic attack) may increase your
risk of developing dementia.
·
Abnormal
aging of blood vessels (atherosclerosis). This condition occurs when deposits of cholesterol and
other substances (plaques) build up in your arteries and narrow your blood
vessels. Atherosclerosis can increase your risk of vascular dementia by
reducing the flow of blood that nourishes your brain.
·
High
cholesterol. Elevated levels
of low-density lipoprotein (LDL), the "bad" cholesterol, are
associated with an increased risk of vascular dementia.
·
High
blood pressure. When your blood
pressure's too high, it puts extra stress on blood vessels everywhere in your
body, including your brain. This increases the risk of vascular problems in the
brain.
·
Diabetes. High glucose levels damage blood vessels
throughout your body. Damage in brain blood vessels can increase your risk of
stroke and vascular dementia.
·
Smoking. Smoking directly damages your blood
vessels, increasing your risk of atherosclerosis and other circulatory
diseases, including vascular dementia.
·
Obesity. Being overweight is a well-known risk
factor for vascular diseases in general, and therefore, presumably increases
your risk of vascular dementia.
·
Atrial
fibrillation. In this abnormal
heart rhythm, the upper chambers of your heart begin to beat rapidly and
irregularly, out of coordination with your heart's lower chambers. Atrial
fibrillation increases your risk of stroke because it causes blood clots to
form in the heart that can break off and go to the brain blood vessels.
Prevention
The health of your brain's blood vessels is
closely linked to your overall heart health. Taking these steps to keep your
heart healthy may also help reduce your risk of vascular dementia:
·
Maintain
a healthy blood pressure. Keeping
your blood pressure in the normal range may help prevent both vascular dementia
and Alzheimer's disease.
·
Prevent
or control diabetes. Avoiding the
onset of type 2 diabetes, with diet and exercise, is another possible way to
decrease your risk of dementia. If you already have diabetes, controlling your
glucose levels may help protect your brain blood vessels from damage.
·
Quit
smoking. Smoking tobacco
damages blood vessels everywhere in your body.
·
Get
physical exercise. Regular physical
activity should be a key part of everyone's wellness plan. In addition to all
of its other benefits, exercise may help you avoid vascular dementia.
·
Keep
your cholesterol in check. A
healthy, low-fat diet and cholesterol-lowering medications if you need them may
reduce your risk of strokes and heart attacks that could lead to vascular
dementia, probably by reducing the amount of plaque deposits building up inside
your brain's arteries.
Diagnosis
Doctors can nearly always determine that you
have dementia, but there's no specific test that confirms you have vascular
dementia. Your doctor will make a judgment about whether vascular dementia is
the most likely cause of your symptoms based on the information you provide,
your medical history for stroke or disorders of the heart and blood vessels,
and results of tests that may help clarify your diagnosis.
Lab tests
If your medical record doesn't include recent
values for key indicators of the health of your heart and blood vessels, your
doctor will test your:
·
Blood pressure
·
Cholesterol
·
Blood sugar
He or she may also order tests to rule out
other potential causes of memory loss and confusion, such as:
·
Thyroid disorders
·
Vitamin deficiencies
Neurological exam
Your doctor is likely to check your overall
neurological health by testing your:
·
Reflexes
·
Muscle tone and
strength, and how strength on one side of your body compares with the other
side
·
Ability to get up from
a chair and walk across the room
·
Sense of touch and
sight
·
Coordination
·
Balance
Brain imaging
Images of your brain can pinpoint visible
abnormalities caused by strokes, blood vessel diseases, tumors or trauma that
may cause changes in thinking and reasoning. A brain-imaging study can help
your doctor zero in on more-likely causes for your symptoms and rule out other
causes.
Brain-imaging procedures your doctor may
recommend to help diagnose vascular dementia include:
·
Magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI). An MRI uses
radio waves and a strong magnetic field to produce detailed images of your
brain. You lie on a narrow table that slides into a
tube-shaped MRI machine, which makes loud banging noises while it
produces images.
MRIs are painless, but some people feel claustrophobic inside
the machine and are disturbed by the noise. MRIs are generally the
preferred imaging test because MRIs can provide even more detail
than CT scans about strokes, ministrokes and blood vessel
abnormalities and is the test of choice for evaluating vascular dementia.
·
Computerized
tomography (CT) scan. For
a CT scan, you'll lie on a narrow table that slides into a small
chamber. X-rays pass through your body from various angles, and a computer uses
this information to create detailed cross-sectional images (slices) of your
brain.
A CT scan can provide information about your brain's
structure; tell whether any regions show shrinkage; and detect evidence of a
stroke, ministroke (transient ischemic attacks), a change in blood vessels or a
tumor.
Neuropsychological
tests
This type of exam assesses your ability to:
·
Speak, write and
understand language
·
Work with numbers
·
Learn and remember
information
·
Develop a plan of
attack and solve a problem
·
Respond effectively to
hypothetical situations
Neuropsychological tests sometimes show
characteristic results for people with different types of dementia. People with
vascular dementia may have an exceptionally hard time analyzing a problem and
developing an effective solution.
They may be less likely to have trouble
learning new information and remembering than are people with dementia due to
Alzheimer's disease unless their blood vessel problems affect specific brain
regions important for memory. However, there's often a lot of overlap in exam
results for people with vascular dementia and people who also have the brain
changes of Alzheimer's disease.
Overlap between
vascular and Alzheimer's dementia
While much focus is placed on distinguishing
Alzheimer's dementia from vascular dementia, it turns out there is usually
substantial overlap. Most people diagnosed with Alzheimer's dementia have a
vascular component and similarly most people with vascular dementia have some
degree of coexisting Alzheimer's changes in their brain.
Treatment
Treatment often focuses on managing the health
conditions and risk factors that contribute to vascular dementia.
Controlling conditions that affect the
underlying health of your heart and blood vessels can sometimes slow the rate
at which vascular dementia gets worse, and may also sometimes prevent further
decline. Depending on your individual situation, your doctor may prescribe
medications to:
·
Lower your blood
pressure
·
Reduce your
cholesterol level
·
Prevent your blood
from clotting and keep your arteries clear
·
Help control your
blood sugar if you have diabetes
Lifestyle and home
remedies
Though these haven't been proved to alter the
course of vascular dementia, your doctor will likely recommend that you:
·
Participate in regular
physical activity
·
Eat healthy
·
Try to maintain a
normal weight
·
Engage in social
activities
·
Challenge your brain
with games, puzzles and new activities, such as an art class or listening to
new music
·
Limit how much alcohol
you drink
Coping and support
People with any type of dementia and their
caregivers — whether it's vascular dementia or Alzheimer's disease — experience
a mixture of emotions, including confusion, frustration, anger, fear,
uncertainty, grief and depression.
Caring for someone
with dementia
·
Seek
out support. Many people with
dementia and their families benefit from counseling or local support services.
Contact your local Alzheimer's Association affiliate to connect with support
groups, resources and referrals, home care agencies, residential care
facilities, a telephone help line, and educational seminars.
·
Plan
for the future. While your loved
one is in the earlier stages of the disease, talk with a lawyer about the types
of legal documents you'll need in the future, such as power of attorney, health
care proxy and an advanced directive.
·
Give
encouragement. Care partners
can help a person cope with vascular dementia by being there to listen,
reassuring the person that life can still be enjoyed, providing encouragement,
and doing their best to help the person retain dignity and self-respect.
·
Provide
a calm environment. A calm and
predictable environment can help reduce worry and agitation. Establish a daily
routine that includes enjoyable activities well within the comfort zone of the
person with vascular dementia.
·
Do
activities together. Instead of
dwelling on what's to come, try to find activities you both like to do, such as
a painting class or a long walk.
·
Respect
independence as often as is safe. It may be a long time before your loved one has to give up
living alone or driving. The early stages of dementia can last years, and your
loved one may still be capable of doing many things on his or her own. If you
and your loved one can't agree on when it's time to stop certain activities,
such as driving, ask your loved one's doctor for his or her advice.
Caring for the
caregiver or care partner
Providing care for and supporting a person
with dementia is physically and emotionally demanding. Feelings of anger and
guilt, frustration and discouragement, worry and grief, and social isolation
are common. But paying attention to your own needs and well-being is one of the
most important things you can do for yourself and for the person in your care.
If you're a caregiver or care partner:
·
Learn
as much about the disease as you can. Ask your primary care doctor or neurologist about good
sources of information. Your local librarian also can help you find good
resources.
·
Ask
questions of doctors,
social workers and others involved in the care of your loved one.
·
Call
on friends and family members for help
when you need it.
·
Take
a break every day.
·
Take
care of your health by seeing your
own doctors on schedule, eating healthy meals and getting exercise.
·
Make
time for friends, and consider
joining a support group.
Preparing for your
appointment
If you've had a stroke, your first
conversations about your symptoms and recovery will likely take place in the
hospital. If you're noticing milder symptoms, you may decide that you want to
talk to your doctor about changes in your thought processes, or you may seek
care at the urging of a family member who arranges your appointment and goes
with you.
You may start by seeing your primary care
doctor, but he or she is likely to refer you to a doctor who specializes in
disorders of the brain and nervous system (neurologist).
Because appointments can be brief, and there's
often a lot of ground to cover, it's a good idea to be well prepared for your
appointment. Here's some information to help you get ready and know what to
expect from your doctor.
What you can do
·
Be
aware of any pre-appointment restrictions. When you make your appointment, ask if you need to fast
for blood tests or if you need to do anything else to prepare for diagnostic
tests.
·
Write
down all of your symptoms. Your
doctor will want to know details about what's causing your concern about your
memory or mental function. Make notes about some of the most important examples
of forgetfulness, poor judgment or other lapses you want to mention. Try to
remember when you first started to suspect that something might be wrong. If
you think your difficulties are getting worse, be ready to describe them.
·
Take
along a family member or friend, if possible. Corroboration from a relative or trusted friend can play a
key role in confirming that your difficulties are apparent to others. Having
someone along can also help you recall all the information provided during your
appointment.
·
Make
a list of your other medical conditions. Your doctor will want to know if you're currently being
treated for diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease, past strokes or any
other conditions.
·
Make
a list of all your medications, including over-the-counter drugs and vitamins or
supplements.
Writing down a list of questions ahead of time
can help you remember your biggest concerns and allow you to make the most of
your appointment. If you're seeing your doctor regarding concerns about
vascular dementia, some questions to ask include:
·
Do you think I have
memory problems?
·
Do you think my
symptoms are due to circulation problems in my brain?
·
What tests do I need?
·
If I have vascular
dementia, will you or another doctor manage my ongoing care? Can you help me
get a plan in place to work with all my doctors?
·
What treatments are
available?
·
Is there anything I
can do that might help slow the progression of dementia?
·
Are there any clinical
trials of experimental treatments I should consider?
·
What should I expect
to happen over the long term? What steps do I need to take to prepare?
·
Will my symptoms
affect how I manage my other health conditions?
·
Do you have any
brochures or other printed material I can take home with me? What websites and
support resources do you recommend?
In addition to the questions you've prepared
ahead of time, don't hesitate to ask your doctor to clarify anything you don't
understand.
What to expect from
your doctor
Your doctor is also likely to have questions
for you. Being ready to respond may free up time to focus on any points you
want to talk about in-depth. Your doctor may ask:
·
What kinds of thinking
problems and mental lapses are you having? When did you first notice them?
·
Are they steadily
getting worse, or are they sometimes better and sometimes worse? Have they
suddenly gotten worse?
·
Has anyone close to
you expressed concern about your thinking and reasoning?
·
Have you started
having problems with any long-standing activities or hobbies?
·
Do you feel any sadder
or more anxious than usual?
·
Have you gotten lost
lately on a driving route or in a situation that's usually familiar to you?
·
Have you noticed any
changes in the way you react to people or events?
·
Do you have any change
in your energy level?
·
Are you currently
being treated for high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes, heart
disease or stroke? Have you been treated for any of these in the past?
·
What medications,
vitamins or supplements are you taking?
·
Do you drink alcohol
or smoke? How much?
·
Have you noticed any
trembling or trouble walking?
·
Are you having any
trouble remembering your medical appointments or when to take your medication?
·
Have you had your
hearing and vision tested recently?
·
Did anyone else in your
family ever have trouble with thinking or remembering things as they got older?
Was anyone ever diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease or dementia?
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