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Diagnosis of dementia in primary care: results of a representative survey in Lower Saxony, Germany

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Abstract

To investigate whether an early diagnosis of dementia is established, whether a differentiation is made between vascular and primary degenerative etiology, and whether treatable causes of dementia are considered in primary care, we performed a survey using three written sample case histories describing slight memory impairment (case 1) or moderate dementia (case 2a: vascular dementia; case 2b: degenerative dementia of Alzheimer type). The combinations 1 and 2a or 1 and 2b were randomly assigned and presented to ambulatory-care physicians (145 general practitioners and primary care internists and 14 neuropsychiatrists in private practice) in Göttingen and rural surroundings by a trained investigator who then performed a standardized interview. The study was representative (response rate 83.2%). For the sample case with slight memory complaints 13.8% of all physicians arrived at a primary diagnosis of depression and 44.0% considered depression for differential diagnosis. Senile dementia of Alzheimer type was considered less often. In the sample cases with moderate dementia according to established scientific criteria, there was a striking under-diagnosis of dementia, and in both cases an over-diagnosis of underlying vascular etiology. Treatable causes of dementia, such as possible drug interactions and substance abuse, were considered only by a minority of physicians. In conclusion, memory deficits seem to be regarded mainly as consequences of disturbed cerebral perfusion, and dementia as well as depression and drug adverse effects seem to be under-diagnosed in primary care.

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Stoppe, G., Sandholzer, H., Staedt, J. et al. Diagnosis of dementia in primary care: results of a representative survey in Lower Saxony, Germany. Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Nuerosci 244, 278–283 (1994). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02190381

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02190381

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