Pick’s disease
Alternative Names
Primary progressive aphasia; Aphasia - primary progressive; Semantic dementia; Dementia - semantic; Frontotemporal dementia; Arnold Pick's disease
Symptoms
Behavior changes
- Inappropriate behavior
- Compulsive behaviors (for example, overeating or only eating one type of food)
- Repetitive behavior
- Withdrawal from social interaction
- Inability to function or interact in social or personal situations
- Can't keep a job
- Problems with personal hygiene
Emotional changes
- Abrupt mood changes
- Does not show emotional warmth, concern, empathy, sympathy
- Indifference to events or environment (apathy)
- Does not recognize behavioral changes
- Inappropriate mood
- Decreased interest in daily living activities
Language changes
- Echolalia (person repeats anything spoken to them)
- Aphasia (decreased language ability, difficulty speaking or understanding speech)
- Difficulty finding a word
- Shrinking vocabulary
- Weak, uncoordinated speech sounds
-
Can't speak
(mutism)
- Decreased ability to read or write
Neurological problems
-
Weakness
- Increased muscle tone (rigidity)
- Movement/coordination difficulties (apraxia)
- Memory loss that gets worse
Other problems
Signs and tests
The doctor will ask you about your medical history and symptoms.
Tests may be ordered to help rule out other causes of dementia, including dementia due to metabolic causes. A neurological examination can help reveal what part of the brain is affected. Psychological studies and tests of sensation, cognitive function, and motor function may be abnormal.
- Neuropsychological assessment shows a pattern of mental decline that suggests selective loss of cognitive function that can be localized to the frontal and/or temporal lobes of the brain.
- An EEG (electroencephalogram) shows nonspecific changes in electrical activity of the brain.
- A head CT scan shows loss of tissue mass of affected lobes of the brain.
- A brain MRI can detect mild degrees of frontal and temporal atrophy missed by the head CT scan.
- Cerebrospinal fluid examination after a lumbar puncture is usually normal.
It is important to note that the definitive diagnosis can only be made with a brain biopsy. However, ongoing efforts are directed at developing a biological marker that would allow a firm diagnosis without the need for such an invasive procedure.
Review Date: 11/07/2005
Reviewed By: Kevin Sheth, MD, Department of Neurology, Brigham and Women's
Hospital and Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical
School, Boston, MA. Review provided by VeriMed Healthcare Network.

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