Depression vs. Dementia

This item just appeared on the news tubes, and I thought I'd pass it
along.  


href="http://news.monstersandcritics.com/health/news/article_1396601.php/Distinguishing_signs_of_early_dementia_from_depression_is_tricky">Distinguishing
signs of early dementia from depression is tricky




Mar 24, 2008, 3:07 GMT



Berlin - It's often difficult to differentiate between early stages of
dementia and depression, but a precise psychiatric examination can
help, said the German society for psychiatry, psychotherapy and
neurology in Berlin.



'An Alzheimer dementia usually begins with creeping disturbances in
memory, difficulty finding words, changes in behaviour and a decrease
in activity,' said Professor Wolfgang Maier, a member of the society's
board of directors.



Depression is similar. The difference is patients with depression can
often give detailed descriptions of their memory problems, while people
with dementia tend to play them down.



This is not really news, as far as it goes.  Unfortunately,
they do not link to any source material.  Presumably, they
were reporting on the proceeds at a conference.  Perhaps the
study itself has not been published yet.



Still, the basic message for the general public is that it can indeed
be difficult to establish the distinction.  There is a term, href="http://www.medterms.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=5097">pseudodementia
of depression
, that is used to denote the situation
in which someone appears to have dementia, but actually has depression.
 



Of course, the two conditions can coexist.  In that case, it
generally is desirable to treat both.


Tags

More like this

A couple of href="http://www.merck.com/mmpe/sec16/ch221/ch221g.html" rel="tag">Parkinson's Disease related items came across the news wires, briefly.  There are lessons in both of them, but both leave me with unresolved questions.   The first one I noticed was a report based upon a journal…
The New Old Age blog at the NYTimes -- hadn't read it before, but I like it -- has a post about reversible causes of cognitive decline in the elderly. I think they make a really good point: there are reversible causes to senility. Not all mental decline in the elderly is "normal" and certainly…
rel="tag">Simon N. Young, PhD, the Editor-in-chief of the Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience, has written an editorial: How To Increase Serotonin In The Human Brain Without Drugs.  In is published in this month's edition of the Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience. The Journal is an…
This case was href="http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/357/23/2411">written up in the NEJM, and made freely accessible.  The image on the top left shows a brain scan taken three years earlier than the one on the top right.  The other images show the cells in the tumor.   It is a…