What are the three subcategories of Neurocognitive disorders?
What are delirium, major neurocognitive disorder, and mild neurocognitive disorder?
In the DSM-5, the term major neurocognitive disorder is used. What is another name for it?
What is dementia?
Which impairment affects remembering recent events?
What is memory?
What are localized areas of abnormality or damage in the brain called?
What are focal lesions?
What age groups are associated with early onset Alzheimer's?
What are 40s to 50s?
Which impairment causes an individual to question who they are, what day it is, and identifying familiar people?
What is orientation?
Of the four on the slides, name 2 risk factors for Alzheimer's.
What is Age, Smoking, Fewer years of education, or Head trauma?
Which disease affects 1 in every 10,000 people?
What is Huntington's disease?
Which impairment causes an individual to have overreactive emotions?
What is emotional control?
What are the two types of brain damages mentioned in the slides?
What are Diffuse damage (widespread) and focal lesions?
What is the second most common neurodegenerative disorder?
What is Parkinson's disease?
Which impairment causes an individual to have underreactive emotions?
What is apathy/emotional blunting?
What are the two types of amnesia that explains an individual's difficulty to recall events immediately before or immediately after injury or trauma?
What are retrograde and anterograde amnesia?
Name the chronic neuropsychiatric disorder caused by vitamin B1 (thiamine) deficiency.
What is Korsakoff’s syndrome?
Which impairment affects drawing and handwriting?
What is visuospatial ability?