Presentation
80 year old retired engineer presenting with an 18 month history of memory lapses associated with naming problems and handwriting dyspraxia. There were recent episodes of becoming lost in public. On neurological examination he demonstrated oculomotor dyspraxia.
Patient Data
Mental State Examination
Neatly dressed and groomed elderly gentleman
Animated in conversation with spontaneous speech illustrated by vigorous gesturing
Intermittent word-finding difficulties
Mood "frustrated" and "depressed"
Affect generally reactive, but upset when unable to write name
No formal thought disorder, delusions or hallucinations
No overt impairment of insight or judgement
Attention: 11/20
Visuoconstructional: 16.5/20
Memory: 7/20
Executive: 10.5/20
Language: 12/20
Total: 47/100
Diffuse cerebral atrophy is evident with a predilection of the parietal lobes and perisylvian regions. There is mild atrophy of the mesial temporalstructures. The differential diagnosis is between and the posterior variantof Alzheimer's disease and a frontotemporal dementia.Tiny focus of susceptibility artefact in the inferolateral right frontallobe may be secondary to amyloid angiography. Minimal changes of small vessel chronic ischaemic disease.
RADIOPHARMACEUTICAL: 99mTc Neurolite, 806 MBq
RESULTS: There is moderately decreased perfusion seen in the parasagittal areas bilaterally with reduction of tracer seen in the pre-cingulate gyrus. Mildly decreased tracer is seen homogeneously throughout both temporal lobes. The occipital and frontal lobes appear normal.
OVERALL IMPRESSION: The findings are highly suggestive of Alzheimer's disease.
Case Discussion
This case is illustrative of the posterior variant of Alzheimer disease (posterior cortical atrophy) insofar as the patient presents with marked visual agnosia and oculomotor dyspraxia. As a previously fluent speaker of three languages, the patient also gave a striking history of losing words in his more recent languages first, and attached the best preservation of language function to his mother tongue.