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. 1997 Jan;244(1):17-22.
doi: 10.1007/pl00007724.

Reversible dementia in elderly patients referred to a memory clinic

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Reversible dementia in elderly patients referred to a memory clinic

G J Walstra et al. J Neurol. 1997 Jan.

Abstract

Dementia has a reversible cause in some cases, and these should be diagnosed without over-investigating the many patients with irreversible disease. We prospectively studied the prevalence of reversible dementia in a memory clinic, determined the added value of investigations compared with clinical examination and assessed the outcome of treatment of potentially reversible causes by measuring (1) cognition, (2) disability in daily functioning, (3) behavioural changes and (4) caregiver burden. Two hundred patients aged 65 years and over were examined, using the CAMDEX-N. If they were demented, the probable cause was diagnosed clinically and confirmed or excluded by a standard set of investigations, which were done in all patients. Of the patients, 170 (mean age 79.2 years) were demented; 31 were treated for potentially reversible causes. At follow-up after 6 months, no patients showed complete reversal of dementia. Five patients improved on clinical impression, but only one on clinical measurement. Thirty patients were cognitively impaired, but not demented; seven were treated. Judged clinically, three patients improved, but on assessment only one did so; she recovered completely. Blood tests often produced diagnostic results that were not expected clinically, but electroencephalography and computed tomography of the brain did not. None of the investigations had an effect on outcome of dementia after treatment. We conclude that in elderly patients referred to a memory clinic, the prevalence of reversible dementia is of the order of 1%, if outcome after treatment is assessed by a standardized measurement. We recommend blood tests in all patients, to detect not only metabolic causes of dementia but also co-morbidity possibly worsening the dementia. Other investigations can be performed on clinical indication. Clinical evaluation remains the mainstay of diagnosis in dementia.

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