Abstract
Background. The term frontotemporal dementia (FTD) covers both the temporal and frontal
presentations of this condition. The frontal variant (fv) presents with insidious changes in
personality and behaviour, with neuropsychological evidence of disproportionate frontal
dysfunction. Although psychiatric features are well recognized, there is little systematic data
examining the mental state using assessment instruments and no reported studies of the longitudinal
progress and assessment.Methods. Fifteen patients with a diagnosis of FTD(fv) were assessed using the Comprehensive
Psychiatric Rating Scale (CPRS). A subgroup of five patients were reassessed annually using the
same instrument, generating data over a 3-year period.Results. At initial assessment a third of 15 patients had no psychiatric symptoms to report. Three
patients reported symptoms of sadness, but only one patient met criteria for DSM-IV major
depressive episode. One patient experienced symptoms of elation, but did not meet criteria for
manic episode, while two patients had hypochondriacal complaints but did not meet DSM-IV
criteria for hypochondriasis. One of these patients also experienced the compulsion to count but did
not meet criteria for obsessive compulsive disorder. The objective mental state was, on the whole,
not congruent with the reported symptoms. Five patients assessed over a 3-year period showed no
progression of their subjectively reported symptoms.Conclusions. Psychiatric symptoms although often present were characterized by their shallowness,
lack of elaboration and non-development over time.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
53 articles.
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