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Focus on dementia
Alzheimer's disease is not the only type of
dementia. Two particular forms are dementia
with Lewy bodies and Parkinson's disease
dementia.
In both forms, the diagnosis is of vital
importance because the treatment for these
dementias differs from that for Alzheimer's
dementia, as Brit Mollenhauer and co-authors
explain in the dementia theme issue of Deutsches
Ärzteblatt International (Dtsch
Arztebl Int 2010; 107[39]: 684-91).
In more than 75% of patients, the memory
impairments are due to Alzheimer's disease.
In Lewy body dementia, which is accompanied
by cognitive and/or further psychiatric
symptoms, and in Parkinson's disease
dementia, these develop only after the motor
symptoms of the disorder have fully
developed.
Gerhard Eschweiler and co-authors (Dtsch
Arztebl Int 2010; 107[39]: 677-83) in their
article introduce biomarkers that raise the
probability of identifying Alzheimer's
disease at the stage of mild cognitive
impairment and up to five years before
full-blown dementia to 80%.
Richard Mahlberg in an introductory
editorial emphasizes that the attempts to
find an exact differential diagnosis are not
merely academic exercises, but that new
developments of diagnosis-specific,
differentiated interventions for the future
depend crucially on a correct initial
diagnosis.