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MEDIA CONTACT: Elizabeth
Crown at (312) 503-8928 or at e-crown@northwestern.edu
October 20, 2003
Form of Memory Loss Confused With Alzheimer’s
CHICAGO --- Alzheimer’s disease is the single most common
cause of dementia, a chronically progressive brain condition that
impairs intellect and behavior to the point where customary activities
of daily living become compromised. Over 4 million Americans have
Alzheimer’s disease. Its high prevalence may lead people to
believe that dementia is always due to Alzheimer’s disease
and that memory loss is a feature of all dementias.
However, an article by Alzheimer’s disease expert M.-Marsel Mesulam, M.D.,
in the Oct. 16 issue of The New England Journal of Medicine reports that nearly
a quarter of all dementias, especially those of presenile onset, may be caused
by diseases other than Alzheimer’s disease and that some of these so-called
atypical dementias involve cognitive abnormalities in areas other than memory.
Mesulam is Ruth and Evelyn Dunbar Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
and professor of neurology at the Feinberg School of Medicine and director of
the Cognitive Neurology and Alzheimer’s Disease Center at Northwestern
University.
Mesulam described, for example, primary progressive aphasia, an unusual dementia
of unknown cause that is characterized by a relentless loss of language but with
memory relatively preserved. Once considered a rare condition, primary progressive
aphasia is now commonly included among dementia syndromes and has been reported
in several hundred individuals.
Alzheimer’s disease patients have forgetfulness, usually accompanied by
apathy. They misplace personal objects, repeat questions and forget recent events.
However, while these patients may forget people’s names, word-finding during
conversation is not a major problem.
In contrast, patients with primary progressive aphasia come to medical attention
because of the onset of word-finding difficulties, abnormal speech patterns and
glaring spelling errors. Some patients cannot find the right words to express
their thoughts. Others cannot understand the meaning of words either heard or
seen. Still others cannot name objects in their environment.
In some patients with primary progressive aphasia, the ability to write language
may be less impaired than the ability to speak it. Others develop agrammatism,
using inappropriate word order and misusing word endings, prepositions, pronouns,
conjunctions and verb tenses.
Language is the only area of prominent dysfunction for at least the first two
years of primary progressive aphasia. In these patients, structural brain imaging
studies do not reveal a specific lesion, other than atrophy, that can account
for the language deficit, Mesulam said. Language difficulties may be the patient’s
only symptoms for 10 to 14 years. Other cognitive impairments may emerge, but
the language deficit remains the primary feature throughout the illness and progresses
more rapidly than deficits in other areas.
Also in contrast to many patients with Alzheimer’s disease, who tend to
lose interest in recreational and social activities, some individuals with primary
progressive aphasia maintain and even intensify their involvement in complex
hobbies such as gardening, carpentry, sculpting and painting. One patient Mesulam
described continued to fly his airplane until aphasia prevented him from communicating
with ground control.
In patients with suspected primary progressive aphasia, evaluation by a speech
therapist is useful for exploring alternative communication strategies, Mesulam
said. Unlike patients with Alzheimer’s disease, who cannot retain new information
in memory, patients with primary progressive aphasia can recall and evaluate
recent events even though they may not be able to express their knowledge verbally.
Currently, there is no effective pharmacologic treatment for primary progressive
aphasia. However, from the vantage point of research, the condition provides
a rare opportunity for investigating the molecular mechanisms of focal neurodegeneration
and the neuropsychological organization of language function, Mesulam said.
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