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Ne perds pas la carte - Soutien à la formation et la recherche sur la maladie d'Alzheimer Alzheimer disease - Brazil
National policies, reports and guidelines PubMed/Medline Epidemiology Abstracts of selected papers
Bottino CM, Azevedo D Jr, Tatsch M, Hototian SR, Moscoso MA, Folquitto J, Scalco AZ, Bazzarella MC, Lopes MA, Litvoc J. Estimate of dementia
prevalence in a community sample from São Paulo, Brazil. Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord. 2008;26(4):291-9. Epub 2008 Oct 9.
AIMS: To estimate dementia prevalence and describe the etiology of dementia in a community sample from the city of São Paulo, Brazil. METHODS: A sample of subjects older than 60 years was screened for dementia in the first phase. During the second phase, the diagnostic workup included a structured interview, physical and neurological examination, laboratory exams, a brain scan, and DSM-IV criteria diagnosis. RESULTS: Mean age was 71.5 years (n = 1,563) and 58.3% had up to 4 years of schooling (68.7% female). Dementia was diagnosed in 107 subjects with an observed prevalence of 6.8%. The estimate of dementia prevalence was 12.9%, considering design effect, nonresponse during the community phase, and positive and negative predictive values. Alzheimer's disease was the most frequent cause of dementia (59.8%), followed by vascular dementia (15.9%). Older age and illiteracy were significantly associated with dementia. CONCLUSIONS: The estimate of dementia prevalence was higher than previously reported in Brazil, with Alzheimer's disease and vascular dementia being the most frequent causes of dementia. Dementia prevalence in Brazil and in other Latin American countries should be addressed by additional studies to confirm these higher dementia rates which might have a sizable impact on countries' health services. Copyright 2008 S. Karger AG, Basel.
Tatsch MF, Bottino CM, Azevedo D, Hototian SR, Moscoso MA, Folquitto JC, Scalco AZ, Louza MR. Neuropsychiatric symptoms in Alzheimer disease
and cognitively impaired, nondemented elderly from a community-based sample in Brazil: prevalence and relationship with dementia severity.
Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2006 May;14(5):438-45.
OBJECTIVES: The objectives of this study were to describe the prevalence of neuropsychiatric symptoms of dementia in Alzheimer disease (AD) and cognitively impaired nondemented (CIND) subjects from a community-based Brazilian sample and to correlate these symptoms with severity of cognitive deficits. METHOD: A total of 1,563 randomly selected subjects were evaluated with the following screening tests: Mini-Mental Status Examination, Fuld Object Memory Evaluation, Informant Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline in the Elderly, and Activities of Daily Living-International Scale. Screen positives were submitted to a workup for dementia, physical and neurologic examination, cranial computed tomography or cerebral magnetic resonance imaging, the Cambridge Examination for Mental Disorders, Clinical Dementia Rating Scale (CDR), and the Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI). Diagnosis was made according to Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, criteria. RESULTS: Sixty patients with AD, 25 CIND, and 78 healthy elderly subjects were evaluated. Informants reported that 78.33% of patients with AD had one or more neuropsychiatric symptoms. Apathy (53.33%), depression (38.33%), sleep alterations (38.33%), and anxiety (25%) were the most prevalent disturbances in AD subjects. These disturbances were more prevalent in patients with AD than in the comparison group and CIND individuals. In the CIND group, the most frequent neuropsychiatric symptoms were anxiety and sleep alterations (both with 24%) followed by depression (16%). Total NPI scores were significantly different between AD and CIND groups, AD and comparison groups, and CIND and the comparison group. Apathy was the only neuropsychiatric symptom that was significantly different between the groups divided according to the CDR being more frequent in subjects with moderate to severe dementia. CONCLUSIONS: Neuropsychiatric symptoms seem to be as common in patients living in a developing country as they are in demented patients from the developed world. Indeed, the fact that some of our results are similar to other population-based studies may suggest that cultural factors play a minor role in the emergence of these symptoms, at least in a Latin American country like Brazil.
Nitrini R, Caramelli P, Herrera E Jr, de Castro I, Bahia VS, Anghinah R, Caixeta LF, Radanovic M, Charchat-Fichman H, Porto CS, Teresa Carthery
M, Hartmann AP, Huang N, Smid J, Lima EP, Takahashi DY, Takada LT. Mortality from dementia in a community-dwelling Brazilian population. Int
J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2005 Mar;20(3):247-53.
BACKGROUND: The influence of dementia on mortality has not yet been reported for a Latin American country. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the influence of dementia on mortality of a community-dwelling elderly population in Brazil, and to verify the extent to which the diagnosis of dementia is reported on death certificates. METHODS: A cohort of 1,656 individuals, aged 65 and over, was screened for dementia at their domiciles, in 1997. The same population was re-evaluated in 2000, and information on deaths was obtained from relatives and from the municipal obituary service. Kaplan-Meier curves were used for the survival analysis, and the mortality risk ratio (MMR) was calculated using Cox proportional hazards models. RESULTS: We obtained data from 1,393 subjects, corresponding to 84.1% of the target population. The number of deaths was 58 (51.3%) among the patients with dementia and 163 (12.7%) among those without dementia in 1997 (p <0.0001). Dementia and Alzheimer's disease (AD) decreased survival, with hazards ratios of 5.16 [95% Confidence Interval (CI): 3.74-7.12] for dementia and 4.76 (95% CI: 3.16-7.18) for AD. The Cox proportional hazards model identified dementia (MMR=3.92, 95% CI: 2.80-5.48) as the most significant predictor of death, followed by age, history of stroke, complaints of visual impairment and heart failure and by severe arterial hypertension in the baseline evaluation. Dementia and/or AD were mentioned in only 12.5% of the death certificates of individuals with dementia. CONCLUSIONS: Dementia causes a significant decrease in survival, and the diagnosis of dementia is rarely reported on death certificates in Brazil.
Fujihara S, Brucki SM, Rocha MS, Carvalho AA, Piccolo AC. Prevalence of presenile dementia in a tertiary outpatient clinic. Arq Neuropsiquiatr.
2004 Sep;62(3A):592-5.
There are very few reports about prevalence of presenile dementia in Brazil. We reviewed files of patients evaluated with early onset of cognitive impairment in our institution. Among 141 patients (61% males) there was no difference between gender by age at onset or at first evaluation. We have observed an increasing number of patients after 50 years. The most frequent causes were: vascular dementia (36.9%), Alzheimer's disease (20.3%) and traumatic brain injury (9.2%). There was difference among dementia type by age of onset and first evaluation, educational level and length of dementia. These results may be compared with those from other neurologic services in order to replicate or confirm these results.
Takada LT, Caramelli P, Radanovic M, Anghinah R, Hartmann AP, Guariglia CC, Bahia VS, Nitrini R. Prevalence of potentially reversible dementias
in a dementia outpatient clinic of a tertiary university-affiliated hospital in Brazil. Arq Neuropsiquiatr. 2003 Dec;61(4):925-9.
The importance of investigating the etiology for dementia lies in the possibility of treating potentially reversible dementias. The aims of this retrospective study are to determine the prevalence of potentially reversible dementias among 454 outpatients seen at the Cognitive and Behavioral Neurology Unit, Hospital das Clínicas, São Paulo University School of Medicine-Brazil, between the years of 1991 and 2001, and observe their evolution in follow-up. Among the initial 454 patients, 275 fulfilled the DSM-IV criteria for dementia. Alzheimer's disease was the most frequent diagnosis (164 cases; 59.6%). Twenty-two cases (8.0%) of potentially reversible dementia were observed, the most frequent diagnoses being neurosyphilis (nine cases) and hydrocephalus (six cases). Full recovery was observed in two patients and partial recovery in 10 patients. Two cases were not treated and eight cases were lost on follow-up. The prevalence found in the present study falls within the range reported in previous studies (0-30%). Alzheimer disease and related disorders associations
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