Written by Nea Lulik, MSc in Psychology of Individual Differences
Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is a clinical syndrome of frontotemporal lobar degeneration and it is the second most common neurodegenerative dementia in patients under the age of 65(Bathgate, Snowden, Varma, Blackshaw, & Neary, 2001) (Barsuglia, et
al., 2014) .
Behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) is a progressive
deterioration in social functioning and personality (Piguet,
Hornberger, & Mioshi, 2011) (Barsuglia, et
al., 2014)
and it is the most common subtype of FTD. Alzheimer's disease
(AD) is the most common type of dementia and it is characterized by progressive
deterioration in memory and cognitive functions. It typically manifests after
the age of 65 (Galton, Patterson, Xuereb, & Hodges, 2000) .
Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is a clinical syndrome of frontotemporal lobar degeneration and it is the second most common neurodegenerative dementia in patients under the age of 65
Behavioural changes are the prevailing
clinical symptom in bvFTD and are present from the early stage of the disease (Bathgate,
Snowden, Varma, Blackshaw, & Neary, 2001) . Behavioural changes
show high sensitivity to bvFTD. These behaviour changes are loss of basic and
social emotions, selfishness, disinhibition, irritability, neglect of personal
hygiene, loss of interest/apathy, gluttony, preferences for sweet food,
wandering, pacing, hyposexuality, motor and verbal stereotypes (Pressman
& Miller, 2014) . Also personality changes occur at the
initial stage, including social disinhibition and impulsivity (Pressman
& Miller, 2014) . AD patients manifest behavioural and
personality changes as well, which are very similar to bvFTD, but these
manifestations occur later in the stage of AD disease, while bvTFD patients
display them from the beginning. Also, the loss of basic emotions (for example:
fear, happiness, sadness, anger, surprise, disgust) is predominant in bvFTD and
not very common in AD. The loss of feeling of embarrassment is as well strictly
predominant in bvFTD patients (Bathgate, Snowden, Varma,
Blackshaw, & Neary, 2001) .
Barsuglia
et al. (Barsuglia, et al., 2014) have found 3 main
behavioural clusters in bvFTD, which are diminished interest and initiation in
seeking social interactions, lack of social bonding or sustaining attachment
and inter-subjectivity, and poor awareness and adherence to social boundaries
and norms. There findings are consistent with the previous studies regarding
apathy and disinhibition in bvTFD patients and are also in line with the
neuropsychiatric symptoms of the disease. Interpersonal dysfunction is uncommon
in AD patients (Pressman & Miller, 2014) . Inappropriate
social behaviours, also called emotional blunting, is found to be highly
sensitive in distinguishing bvTFD and AD. Caregivers report more severe changes
in emotional blunting in patients with bvTFD than AD patients, and the results
of the study were 90% accurate (Joshi, et al., 2014) .
Typical for bvFTD patients is also overeating,
especially sweet food. This is also consistent with the study of reward-seeking
behaviours in bvFTD (Perry, et al., 2014) . They have a
tendency to keep eating as long the food is present, they steal food from other
people’s plates, and they crave it even when the food is not present. Eating
disturbances are significantly more common in patients with bvFTD than patients
with AD (Bathgate, Snowden, Varma,
Blackshaw, & Neary, 2001) (Jenner,
Reali, Puopolo, & Silveri, 2006) .
Loss of awareness of pain is reported in 41%
of the patients with bvFTD, while is not usual for AD patients (Bathgate, Snowden, Varma, Blackshaw, & Neary,
2001) .
Behaviours in relation to memory and spatial
dysfunction are more prevalent in patients with AD than bvFTD. AD patients are
characterized by reduced spatial orientation (Henderson, Mack, & Williams,
1989) ,
while in bvFTD patients this happen to a lesser extent. AD patients have more
difficulties in locating or mislaying objects (Pena-Casanova, Sanchez-Benavides,
de Sola, Manero-Borras, & Casals-Coll, 2012) , feel more
disoriented. Regarding the language, the use of wrong words is more common in
AD patients, while echolalia and mutism is more frequent in bvFTD (Bathgate,
Snowden, Varma, Blackshaw, & Neary, 2001) . In regard to the feeling
of knowing, metacognition studies has shown that bvFTD patients have severe
levels of anosognosia. AD patients show impaired feeling of knowing, however,
the feeling of knowing is less severe and less diffuse in comparison with bvFTD
patients (Jenner, Reali, Puopolo, & Silveri, 2006) .
Studies (Bathgate, Snowden, Varma, Blackshaw, & Neary, 2001) have shown that
repetitive and compulsive behaviours are common in bvFTD. The tendency to pace
or wander in a fixed path and no attention to details, might be due to the lack
of insightfulness which is very common in bvFTD patients (Bathgate,
Snowden, Varma, Blackshaw, & Neary, 2001) (Rosen, et
al., 2014) .
AD patients do not show repetitive or compulsive behaviours. They do tend to
pace and wander on random paths, rather than fixed ones, like bvFTD patients
do.
A study (Lopez, et al., 1996) showed that
depression is more common in bvFTD patients than AD patients, while psychotic
symptoms, especially delusions, are more common in AD than bvFTD. BvFTD
patients also tend to have more mood disorders than AD patients. However,
considering that apathy and loss of volition are major features in patients
with bvFTD (Bathgate, Snowden, Varma, Blackshaw, & Neary, 2001) , the results of the
Lopez et al. study (1996) are not very
sensitive in regard of bvFTD.
Anterograde episodic memory is the earliest neuropsychological
impairment of AD (Galton, Patterson, Xuereb, &
Hodges, 2000) .
Only recently they discovered that impairment of retrograde and anterograde
memories manifests in bvFTD as well (Wong, Flanagan, Savage, Hodges,
& Hornberg, 2014) . Previous studies always discarded
bvFTD when amnesia was present, because it was a diagnostic exclusion criteria.
But confirmed bvFTD cases report episodic memory deficit in the initial stages
of the disease, and recent findings report these deficits are firmly related to
executive deficits, specifically impairment in strategic retrieval processes.
Galton et al. (2000) have proven that
bvFTD patients can have memory impairment of the same magnitude as AD patients.
There are symptoms which are more common in AD
and some that are more common in bvFTD, but it is not possible to say it with
an absolute certainty. AD and bvFTD are difficult to differentiate because many
times the symptoms overlap, therefore it is very difficult to find tests that
are sufficiently sensitive to distinguishing between the two.
Cognitive tests have proven some difficulties
with assessing bvFTD patients. The issue that can arise is due to the fact that
bvFTD patients have difficulties staying focused, have poor insight and have
apathy. Which raises the question: Are their test results due to cognitive
deficit or behavioural deficit?
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