Western Daily Press

Apathy could be early sign of dementia

-

APATHY could be an early warning sign of dementia in people with cerebral small vessel disease but depression is not, research suggests.

Cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) is the narrowing of the small blood vessels deep inside the brain.

The research, led by Cambridge University, suggests the belief that depression is a risk factor for dementia may be because some depression scales used by clinicians and researcher­s partially assess apathy.

The study, published in the Journal of Neurology, Neurosurge­ry & Psychiatry, is based on analysis over several years of more than 450 SVD patients in the UK and in the Netherland­s.

Scientists found that individual­s with higher baseline apathy, as well as those with increasing apathy over time, had a greater risk of dementia.

In contrast, neither baseline depression nor change in depression had any detectable influence on dementia risk.

The relationsh­ip between apathy and dementia remained after controllin­g for other well-establishe­d risk factors for dementia including age, education, and cognition.

Apathy, defined as a reduction in “goal-directed behaviour”, is a common neuropsych­iatric symptom in SVD, and is distinct from depression, which is another symptom in SVD.

SVD may occur in one in three elderly people and is the most common cause of vascular dementia.

Vascular dementia is caused by reduced blood flow to the brain, which damages and eventually kills brain cells.

Lead author Jonathan Tay, from Cambridge’s Department of Clinical Neuroscien­ces, said: “There has been a lot of conflictin­g research on the associatio­n between late-life depression and dementia.

“Our study suggests that may partially be due to common clinical depression scales not distinguis­hing between depression and apathy.

“Continued monitoring of apathy may be used to assess changes in dementia risk and inform diagnosis.

The study’s participan­ts, recruited from three hospitals in south London and Radboud University’s Neurology Department in the Netherland­s, were assessed for apathy, depression and dementia over several years. In the UK cohort, nearly 20 per cent of participan­ts developed dementia, while 11 per cent in the Netherland­s cohort did, likely due to the more severe burden of SVD in the UK cohort.

In both datasets, patients who later developed dementia showed higher apathy, but similar levels of depression at baseline, compared with patients who did not.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom