Etiology of Dementia in Thai Patients

Author:

Dharmasaroja Pornpatr A.ORCID,Assanasen Jintana,Pongpakdee Sunsanee,Jaisin Kankamol,Lolekha Praween,Phanasathit Muthita,Cheewakriengkrai Laksanun,Chotipanich Chanisa,Witoonpanich Pirada,Pitiyarn Sutisa,Lertwilaiwittaya Pongtawat,Dejthevaporn Charungthai,Limwongse Chanin,Phanthumchinda Kammant,

Abstract

<b><i>Introduction:</i></b> Molecular imaging has been developed and validated in Thai patients, comprising a portion of patients in the dementia registry. This should provide a more accurate diagnosis of the etiology of dementia, which was the focus of this study. <b><i>Methods:</i></b> This was a multicenter dementia study. The baseline characteristics, main presenting symptoms, and results of investigations and cognitive tests of the patients were electronically collected in the registry. Functional imaging and/or molecular imaging were performed in patients with an equivocal diagnosis of the causes of dementia, especially in atypical dementia or young onset dementia (YOD). <b><i>Results:</i></b> There were 454 patients in the study. The mean age of the patients was 78 years, with 60% female. Functional imaging and/or molecular imaging were performed in 57 patients (57/454 patients, 13%). The most common cause of dementia was Alzheimer’s disease (AD; 50%), followed by vascular dementia (VAD; 24%), dementia with Lewy bodies (6%), Parkinson’s disease dementia (6%), frontotemporal dementia (FTD; 2.6%), progressive supranuclear palsy (2%), multiple system atrophy (0.8%), and corticobasal syndrome (0.4%). YOD accounted for 17% (77/454 patients), with a mean age of 58 years. The causes of YOD were early onset amnestic AD (44%), VAD (16%), behavioral variant FTD (8%), posterior cortical atrophy (6.5%), and logopenic variant primary progressive aphasia (5.2%). <b><i>Conclusion:</i></b> AD was the most common cause of dementia in Thai patients and the distribution of other types of dementia and main presenting symptoms were similar to previous reports in Western patients; however, the proportion of YOD was higher.

Publisher

S. Karger AG

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Cognitive Neuroscience

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