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Memory and treatment of cognitive impairments

Memory and treatment of cognitive impairments. MUDr. Tomáš Kašpárek Dep. of Psychiatry Masaryk University, Brno. Contents. Introduction Physiology and classification Memory assessment Disturbances in memory Treatment of cognitive impairment. Introduction.

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Memory and treatment of cognitive impairments

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  1. Memory and treatment of cognitive impairments MUDr. Tomáš Kašpárek Dep. of Psychiatry Masaryk University, Brno

  2. Contents • Introduction • Physiology and classification • Memory assessment • Disturbances in memory • Treatment of cognitive impairment

  3. Introduction • Definition: ability to register, store, and recall information (three stages of memory) • Memory: part of cognitive functions (involved in information processing;such as perception, thinking, attention) • Dimensions of behavior • cognition (reasoning) and emotionality

  4. Stages of memory I: Registration • capacity to add new material (sensory, conceptual, perceptual) to memory • new information need to be properly processed(percepted) – disturbing factors • consciousness • attention • emotions • repetition

  5. „Life cycle“ of a memory trace • Immediate memory • information stored for 15-20s • Short-term memory • consolidation of the memory trace – several minutes to 2 days • medial temporal structures • Long-term memory • formed trace • large cortical areas

  6. Stages of memory II: Retention • ability to hold memories in a storage • large # of neurons (changes in connectivity) involved in the storage of specific memory • sensory specific fractions of complex perceptions in corresponding cortical areas

  7. Stages of memory III: Recall • ability to return stored information • active reconstructions • adding together fractions of the exact recollection • in a specific situation (=influence) – possibility of the failure to represent of past events properly • awareness of the recollection, sureness, proper addressing of time and situation of recollection acquirement

  8. Types of memory: Memory modules (Willingham 1997) • Explicit (declarative) memory – medial temporal cortex • Procedural memory – sensory-motor functional systems • Working memory – prefrontal cortex • Classical conditioning – cerebellum; relation between motor function and perception • Emotional conditioning – amygdala; relation between perception and emotion • Priming - parietal, temporal and frontal cortex

  9. Memory assessment • Immediate recall • series of numbers (most adult recall 6 # forward and 3 in reverse) • Short-term memory • names of 3 inrelated objects after 5 min • Long-term memory • personal history (independent confirmation), general information (names of presidents...) • Scales – MiniMental State Examination • Specific tests – Wechsler Memory Scale III

  10. Disturbances in memory

  11. General notes • memory = set of functions based on different neuronal processes = various dysfunctions according to the pathological process

  12. Disturbances in registration • pathological process • disturbed vigilance, attention • head trauma, seizures, delirium, intoxication (BZD, sedatives), psychosis, depression, anxiety • disturbed structures involved in memory consolidation • hippocampus, mammillary bodies, fornix – i.e. mediotemporal structures • short-term memory dysfunction, immediate recall may be spared

  13. Disturbances in retention • pathological process • impairment of large cortical areas • posttraumatic amnesia • cognitive disorders

  14. Disturbances in recall • may reflect damaged storage • may occur separately • failure to recall with later proper recollection • personality, situation • attention, fatigue...

  15. „Quantitative“ dysfunctions • Amnesia: short/long-term memory impairment in a state of normal consciousness • anterograde: failure to form new information • head trauma, state of CNS dysbalance, drug effect • retrograde: failure to recall old information • head trauma • dissociative amnesia: patchy or selective • Hypermnesia: unusually vivid memory • mania, posttraumatic stress disorder (intrusive memories), obsessive or paranoid personality traits

  16. „Qualitative“ dysfunctions • paramnesias – retrospective falsification of memories during its recollection (awareness of recalled memory, failure to proper class time and situation of memory acquirement) • confabulation – filling memory gaps with inaccurate information; frontal lobe and self-monitoring? • deja vu – sensation of previously experienced situation when experiencing the first time • false awareness of memory • common in normality, increased in fatigue, intoxication, complex partial seizures

  17. Treatment of cognitive impairment

  18. General notes • no specific way to treat memory deficit • treatment modalities focused on the whole spectrum of impairments in cognitive disorders • the most data available for Alzheimer's disease

  19. Psychopharmacotherapy • Reinforcement of cholinergic mechanism • Cholinesterase inhibitors (ChEIs) • Prevention of excitotoxicity • Memantine - NMDA antagonists

  20. Cholinesterase inhibitors I • cholinesterases: acetylcholinesterase (AChE), butyrylcholinexterase (BChe)– hydrolysis of acetylcholin, thus decrease its amount in synapses • molecular forms of AChe • G4 (tetramer) – presynaptic membrane – both hydrolysis and feedback inhibition; decrease in AD and aging • G1 (monomer) – postsynaptic membrane; no significant decrease

  21. Cholinesterase inhibitors II • donepezil • long-acting, selective, reversible AChEI • metabolized by the liver microsome syst. • rivastigmin • pseudo-irreversible, both AChEI (G1) and BChEI • no liver microsome metabolism • galantamin • reversibilie, competitive (increases AC only in areas with low AC concentration – lower central cholinergic side effects than noncompetitive inhibitors) AChEI + allosteric modulation of nACR

  22. Cholinesterase inhibitors III – adverse effects • significant cholinergic side effects in 15% of patients receiving higher doses • most common: • GIT: nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, anorexia, weight loss • CNS: headache, dizziness, insomnia, drowsiness, fatigue, agitation • CVS: bradycardia, syncope • generally mild in severity, short-lived, related to titration (slowly!) • caution in patients with asthma, CHOPD, cardiac conduction defects/clinically significant bradycardia

  23. Memantine I - Rationale • excessive glutamate release in Alzheimer's disease (as well as vascular dementia - ischemic damage) • excitotoxic degradation of neurons • progression of cognitive decline, severity of other symptoms • neuronal degradation is linked with amyloid accumulation

  24. Memantine II – Mechanism of action • non-competitive NMDA antagonist • voltage dependent, fast receptor kinetics – enable physiologic function (LTP, memory) decreased activity of glutamate system • hippocampus, neocortex decreased excitotoxicity - neuronal damage – amyloid accumulation i.e. slow down progression of the disease • 5HT3 blockade • facilitation of LTP • antiemetic effect and regulation of GIT motility (combination with ACEI)

  25. Memantine III – Clinical efficacy • slower progression of vascular and Alzheimer dementia • fast onset of action – 2 weeks • improvement of cognitive functions, vigility, daily activities • reduction of the need for the help of caregivers • efficacy even in the moderate to severe disease stages x ACEI

  26. Memantine IV • Adverse events • generally well tolerated • higher than placebo: insomnia, dizziness, headache, hallucinations (NMDA antagonist – PCP) • Pharmacokinetics • renal excretion • no extensive metabolization • no cytochrome P 450 inhibition • dosage • 20 mg pro die in 2 doses • start: 5 mg, titration: 5 mg per week

  27. References : • Waldinger R.J.: Psychiatry for medical students, Washington, DC : American Psychiatric Press, 1997 • Kaplan HI, Sadock BJ, Grebb JA.: Kaplan and Sadock´s synopsis of psychiatry, Baltimore: Williams and Wilkins, 1997

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