Abstract

AbstractBackgroundHaving in mind a significant percentage of atypical presentations at disease onset (behavioral symptoms, depression, psychotic symptoms or non‐cognitive cognitive deficits), understanding clinical heterogeneity of early onset Alzheimer's disease (EOAD) and frontotemporal dementia (EOFTD) can improve early diagnosis and differentiation between these clinical entities.Our objective was to investigate the heterogeneity of neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPS) in EOAD and EOFTD spectrum.MethodTwo hundred and seven consecutive patients with EOAD and EOFTD spectrum, diagnosed according to the current clinical criteria, were recruited from the Neurology Clinic, Clinical Centre of Serbia. Sociodemographic and clinical characteristics were evaluated using a pre‐designed semi‐structured questionnaire while neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPS) were evaluated using Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI).ResultEOAD and EOFTD patients did not differ in age, age at disease onset, duration of the disease, gender and education. In comparison to EOAD, patients in the EOFTD spectrum expressed agitation, euphoria, apathy, disinhibition, irritability, aberrant motor behavior and dietary changes more frequently. EOFTD behavioral variant patients expressed apathy, aberrant motor behavior and disinhibition more often than patients with PPA, while in PPA anxiety was represented. In EOAD group total NPI score correlated with clinical dementia rating scale score. In the advanced stages of dementia, EOAD patients expressed agitation and irritability more frequently than at disease onset, while in advanced EOFTD agitation and aberrant motor behavior were more frequent than in the earlier stages of the disease. Amnestic and non‐amnestic presentation of EOAD did not differ in frequency on NPSConclusionNPS are a hallmark of behavioral variant of EOFTD and later stages of EOAD.

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