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Liz remembers experiencing episodes of depression since an early age but completed her university degree and worked as a medical doctor for many years. The story starts with the description of a psychotic episode that she experienced for the duration of one summer. Diaries kept from that time were used for the story, giving the episode detail, helped by a poem also written at the time. The depression gradually got worse over the years, despite trying more than twenty different antidepressants and mood stabilisers, regular exercises and prolonged courses of psychotherapy, causing an early retirement and eventually hospital admissions. Finally, ECT was recommended, and it worked despite the very long and resistant type of depression. The improvement was incomplete, though; it required maintenance treatment and caused marked memory problems, which are also described in detail.
Ruth starts with details from her childhood, when she tended to be a perfectionist and had obsessions around contamination. Ruth suffered with episodes of depression herself, but they were short lived and didn’t require treatment. Her severe depression started while on a long travel in two continents. She developed delusions of guilt and was receiving messages, resulting in an admission to a hospital in Canada, and then permitted to fly back home under sedation. Several years later, after severe social stressors, she relapsed and remained depressed for several years. She was again psychotic, believing that she had ‘killed the world’ and eventually became almost mute. Her sister, aware that their grandfather had received ECT, researched the topic and felt that it should be tried, especially after listening to a talk by Dr Sherwin Nuland, who had ECT himself. It was him who used the phrase ‘rising like a phoenix’, which was chosen as the title of this chapter. Ruth had twenty-three sessions before she felt better. She describes in detail her memory problems. She has since followed Sherwin Nuland’s lead by talking about her ECT experience publicly.
To identify barriers and facilitators to help seeking for a dementia diagnosis from the perspective of carers and people with dementia.
Design:
A systematic review of the literature was conducted according to the PRISMA guidelines (PROSPERO protocol registration CRD42018092524). Nine electronic databases were searched for qualitative, quantitative, and mixed methods primary research studies. Two independent reviewers screened titles and abstracts, full texts of eligible studies, and conducted quality appraisal of included articles. A convergent qualitative synthesis approach was used.
Results:
From 7496 articles, 35 papers representing 32 studies from 1986 to 2017 were included. Studies originated from 13 countries across 4 continents. Barriers and facilitators were reported predominantly by carers. A small number of studies included people with dementia. Barriers included denial, stigma and fear, lack of knowledge, normalization of symptoms, preserving autonomy, lack of perceived need, unaware of changes, lack of informal network support, carer difficulties, and problems accessing help. Facilitators included recognition of symptoms as a problem, prior knowledge and contacts, and support from informal network.
Conclusions:
Studies from a 30-year period demonstrated that barriers to help seeking persist globally, despite increasing numbers of national dementia policies. Barriers and facilitators rarely existed independently demonstrating the complexity of help seeking for a diagnosis of dementia. Multiple barriers compounded the decision-making process and more than one facilitator was often required to overcome them. Multi-faceted interventions to reduce barriers are needed, one approach would be a focus on the development of dementia friendly communities to reduce stigma and empower people with dementia and carers.
Subjective memory complaints (SMC) have been suggested as an early marker of mild cognitive impairment and dementia. However, there is a paucity of evidence on the effects of early life conditions on the development of SMC in old age. This study is aimed at investigating the association between childhood socioeconomic status (SES) and SMC in community-dwelling older adults.
Methods:
We used the data of the Japan Gerontological Evaluation Study, a population-based cohort study of people aged 65 years or older enrolled from 28 municipalities across Japan. Childhood SES and SMC in everyday life were assessed from the self-report questionnaire administered in 2010 (n = 16,184). Poisson regression was performed to determine their association, adjusted for potential confounders and life-course mediators and examined cohort effects.
Results:
We identified SMC in 47.4% of the participants. After adjusting for sex, age, and number of siblings, low and middle childhood SES were associated with 29% (prevalence ratio [PR]: 1.29, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.22, 1.36) and 10% higher prevalence of SMC (PR: 1.10, 95%CI: 1.04, 1.17), respectively, compared with high childhood SES (p for trend <.001). The interaction terms between childhood SES and age groups were not statistically significant.
Conclusion:
Childhood SES is significantly associated with SMC among community-dwelling older adults. Efforts to minimize childhood poverty may diminish or delay the onset of SMC and dementia in later life.
This chapter talks about a 47-year-old Caucasian man who was referred due to memory problems and depression following surgical treatment of aortic dissection 1 year earlier. After surgery, he was unable to return to work and began receiving disability benefits. Recent laboratory tests included normal complete blood count and chemistry laboratory examinations. Neuropsychological evaluation included a neurobehavioral status examination, face-to-face neurocognitive testing, and computer-administered measures. This patient illustrates the clinical manifestations of hypoperfusive dementia and he fulfilled NINDS-AIREN diagnostic criteria for vascular dementia including: presence of dementia; evidence of stroke; and a temporal relation between the first two conditions. Despite his relatively young age, and the absence of extracranial and intracranial Cerebrovascular Disease (CVD), he had watershed infarction as a result of relentless hypotension following aortic dissection. Heavy smoking could have impaired the effective maintenance of cerebral blood flow (CBF).
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