Suspecting dementia: canaries, chameleons and zebras

Author:

Johnson Jeremy C SORCID,McWhirter Laura,Hardy Chris J D,Crutch Sebastian J,Marshall Charles R,Mummery Catherine J,Rohrer Jonathan D,Rossor Martin N,Schott Jonathan M,Weil Rimona SORCID,Fox Nick C,Warren Jason D

Abstract

The early and accurate diagnosis of dementia is more important than ever before but remains challenging. Dementia is increasingly the business of neurologists and, with ageing populations worldwide, will become even more so in future. Here we outline a practical, symptom-led, bedside approach to suspecting dementia and its likely diagnosis, inspired by clinical experience and based on recognition of characteristic syndromic patterns. We show how clinical intuition reflects underlying signature profiles of brain involvement by the diseases that cause dementia and suggest next steps that can be taken to define the diagnosis. We propose ‘canaries’ that provide an early warning signal of emerging dementia and highlight the ‘chameleons’ that disguise or mimic this, as well as the ‘zebras’ that herald a rare (and sometimes curable) diagnostic opportunity.

Funder

Alzheimer’s Research UK

ESRC/NIHR

PA23

Dunhill Medical Trust

Guarantors of Brain

University College London Hospitals Biomedical Research Centre

National Institute for Health Research

Alzheimer’s Society, Alzheimer’s Research UK

Alzheimer's Research UK

Alzheimer’s Society

Wolfson Foundation

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Clinical Neurology,General Medicine

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