Abstract

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a debilitating condition currently affecting 4.5 million elderly citizens in the United States alone. It is the most common form of dementia and is associated with significant disability. For many years the prognosis of the disease has remained largely unchanged. Those patients who develop AD face progressive cognitive and functional decline that ultimately shortens their life expectancy and destroys their quality of life. At the same time, the disease has a significant adverse impact on the lives of those family members who serve as caregivers. With the aging of the baby-boomer generation and the expected associated increase in the number of patients with AD, clinicians who treat the elderly will clearly be in need of some new answers. Recent advances in assessment, diagnosis, and treatment offer some hope for relief from this bleak prognosis.Advances in AD include the establishment of clear diagnostic criteria, the validation of disease-specific assessment instruments, and pharmacologic and behavioral therapies for management of symptoms. A handful of medications that enhance cognition have obtained the approval of the Food and Drug Administration, and more are currently in development. Trials of existing medications have demonstrated benefit in the management of the psychiatric symptoms (eg, psychosis and agitation) typically associated with the disease. But much still remains to be done.In the first article in this supplement, Michael A. Rogawski, MD, PhD, explains what is known about the pathogenesis and the behavioral and psychological symptoms of AD. He discusses the scientific basis for empirical therapies currently being used to relieve the symptoms of this disease, focusing on drug therapies approved by the FDA, including the newest AD medication to market memantine.

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