dementia

dementia
demential, adj.
/di men"sheuh, -shee euh/, n. Psychiatry.
severe impairment or loss of intellectual capacity and personality integration, due to the loss of or damage to neurons in the brain.
[1800-10; < L dementia madness, equiv. to dement- out of one's mind (see DEMENT) + -ia n. suffix]

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Chronic, usually progressive deterioration of intellectual functions.

Most common in the elderly, it usually begins with short-term-memory loss once thought a normal result of aging but now known to result from Alzheimer disease. Other common causes are Pick disease and vascular disease. Dementia also occurs in Huntington chorea, paresis (see paralysis), and some types of encephalitis. Treatable causes include hypothyroidism (see thyroid gland), other metabolic diseases, and some malignant tumours. Treatment may arrest dementia's progress but usually does not reverse it.

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      chronic, usually progressive deterioration of intellectual capacity associated with the widespread loss of nerve cells and the shrinkage of brain tissue. Dementia is most commonly seen in the elderly (senile dementia), though it is not part of the normal aging process and can affect persons of any age.

      The most common irreversible dementia is Alzheimer disease. This condition begins with memory loss, which may first appear to be simple absentmindedness or forgetfulness. As dementia progresses, the loss of memory broadens in scope until the individual can no longer remember basic social and survival skills or function independently. Language, spatial or temporal orientation, judgment, or other cognitive capacities may decline, and personality changes may also occur. Dementia is also present in other degenerative brain diseases including Pick disease and Parkinson disease (parkinsonism).

      The second most common cause of dementia is hypertension (high blood pressure) or other vascular conditions. This type of dementia, called multi-infarct, or vascular, dementia results from a series of small strokes (stroke) that progressively destroy the brain. Dementia can also be caused by Huntington disease, syphilis, multiple sclerosis, acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) (AIDS), and some types of encephalitis. Treatable dementias occur in hypothyroidism, other metabolic diseases, and some malignant tumours (tumour). Treatment of the underlying disease in these cases may inhibit the progress of dementia but usually does not reverse it.

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Universalium. 2010.

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