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Agitation and other noncognitive abnormalities in Alzheimer's disease.
Authors:L H Deutsch  B W Rovner
Institution:Georgetown University, School of Medicine, Washington, DC.
Abstract:Agitation and other noncognitive abnormalities in patients with Alzheimer's disease are present in at least 50% of patients and are a serious problem for caregivers. Agitation can be divided into aggressive agitation, physically nonaggressive agitation, and verbal agitation. Persecutory delusions of suspiciousness and stealing are the most common psychotic symptoms. Auditory and visual hallucinations are also associated with delusions. Similar to delusions are misidentifications, which are false beliefs probably secondary to agnosia. They occur in one third of patients with dementia of the Alzheimer type in the form of the belief that strangers are living in the home and misidentification of the patient's home and reflection in the mirror. Passive personality changes are present early in the disease, whereas agitation and psychotic symptoms occur with disease progression and predict a more rapid rate of cognitive decline. Agitation and wandering are related to more severe cognitive impairment and psychosocial variables, and neurochemical variables that may be related to behavior disturbance require further study. There are few systematic studies of behavioral or environmental interventions for behavioral symptoms in patients with Alzheimer's disease. Current treatment emphasizes education of families, the formation of Alzheimer units in the nursing home, and adjunctive psychotropic agents to treat well-defined target symptoms.
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