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Assessment of Suspected Dementia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 December 2014

H. Chertkow
Affiliation:
Bloomfield Centre for Research in Aging, Lady Davis Institute, Dept. of Clinical Neuroscience, and Dept. of Medicine, SMBD-Jewish General Hospital, McGill University, Division of Geriatric Medicine, Dept. of Medicine, McGill University Division of Geriatric Medicine, Dept. of Medicine, SMBD-Jewish General Hospital Research Centre, Institut Universitaire de Gériatrie de Montréal McGill Centre for Studies in Aging, McGill University
H. Bergman
Affiliation:
Bloomfield Centre for Research in Aging, Lady Davis Institute, Dept. of Clinical Neuroscience, and Dept. of Medicine, SMBD-Jewish General Hospital, McGill University, Division of Geriatric Medicine, Dept. of Medicine, McGill University Division of Geriatric Medicine, Dept. of Medicine, SMBD-Jewish General Hospital
H.M. Schipper
Affiliation:
Bloomfield Centre for Research in Aging, Lady Davis Institute, Dept. of Clinical Neuroscience, and Dept. of Medicine, SMBD-Jewish General Hospital, McGill University, Division of Geriatric Medicine, Dept. of Medicine, McGill University Division of Geriatric Medicine, Dept. of Medicine, SMBD-Jewish General Hospital
A.M. Clarfield
Affiliation:
Montreal, QC Canada, and Sarah Herzog Hospital, Jerusalem, Israel
S. Gauthier
Affiliation:
McGill Centre for Studies in Aging, McGill University
S. Fontaine
Affiliation:
Dept. of Radiology, Neurology, and Neurosurgery, Montreal Neurological Hospital, McGill University
R. Bouchard
Affiliation:
Professeur agrègè de clinique (neurologie), Université Laval
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Abstract

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At the Second Canadian Consensus Conference on Dementia (CCCD) (February, 1998), a group of neurologists, geriatricians, and psychiatrists met to consider guidelines for evaluation of dementia in Canada. This review paper formed a background paper for their discussion of dementia diagnosis. These experts from across the country concluded that diagnosis of suspected dementia cases continued to rest on skilled clinical assessment. Mental status exam, preferably in some quantifiable form, has become an essential part of the assessment. Selected laboratory tests are advisable in all cases (CBC, TSH, electrolytes, calcium, and glucose), but the CCCD continued to advise that CT scanning was mandatory only in selected cases where clinical findings pointed to another possibility besides Alzheimer’s disease. The growing list of other diagnostic measures with potential usefulness in diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease or dementia in general was reviewed, but the evidence was judged as insufficient to support routine use of these tests by physicians. As new treatments for Alzheimer’s disease become available, neurologists face new diagnostic challenges - differentiating Mild Cognitive Impairment, Frontotemporal dementias and Mixed dementias, and Lewy Body Dementia. Guidelines to aid in differential diagnosis are presented.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Canadian Journal of Neurological 2001

References

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