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Dementia in Parkinson's disease: a critical review of literature

In the last 30 years, Parkinson's disease has been object of great progress. The majority of patients reaches a longer life with quality because of the modern therapeutic approach. However, dementia that can occur in the evolutive process, has its neuropathology not completelly defined until now. There are lesions in the basal ganglia, in the ventral area of the mesencephalic tegmentum, in the thalamus, in the substantia nigra and in the frontal cortex. The presence of Lewy bodies in the cortex is associated with dementia, in the same way that the anatomopathological features of Alzheimer's disease, in many cases. Dementia should have a multifactorial basis. Different types of neurotransmitters, like serotonin, acetylcholine and dopamine, or even hormones, like Cortisol, may be altered in a great number of demented parkinsonians. Depression, found in up to 40% of patients, have been related as a risk factor for dementia, present approximatelly in 25% of cases. Studies in this area are still conflicting, with some confirming the relation among depression, cortical atrophy, hypercortisolemia and Parkinson's disease. Neuropsychologic studies show that the dementia in Parkinson's disease is of subcortical type. It is also known that parkinsonians, even those without cognitive deficiencies clinically significant, present deficits if submitted to more detailed neuropsychological tests. It is assumed, so, that cognitive impairments are intrinsic to the disease, varying its expression among patients. Dementia shall be diagnosed based on the criteria established in the diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders of the American Psychiatry Association, as well as computed tomography and magnetic resonance. For treatment, parkinsonian dementia does not recognize efficacious agents until now.

Parkinson's disease; dementia; Alzheimer's disease


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