Article Text
Clinicopathological conference
A rare cause of young-onset dementia
Abstract
A 39-year-old woman developed progressive cognitive impairment with neuropsychiatric features, bruxism and seizures; she had a background of recurrent bony fractures. The case formed the clinicopathological conference at the Association of British Neurologists Annual meeting 2022.
- GENETICS
- COGNITION
- DEMENTIA
Data availability statement
No data are available. No datasets were generated or analysed in this paper.
Statistics from Altmetric.com
Linked Articles
Read the full text or download the PDF:
Other content recommended for you
- An Italian family affected by Nasu-Hakola disease with a novel genetic mutation in the TREM2 gene
- Practical approach to the diagnosis of adult-onset leukodystrophies: an updated guide in the genomic era
- Hereditary leukoencephalopathy with axonal spheroids: a spectrum of phenotypes from CNS vasculitis to parkinsonism in an adult onset leukodystrophy series
- Perfusion CT imaging as a diagnostic and prognostic tool for dementia: prospective case–control study
- Fahr's disease: an incidental finding in a patient of tubercular meningitis
- Not just neurological stamp collecting: when rare diagnoses lead to fundamental advances
- Hereditary diffuse leucoencephalopathy with spheroids
- Biomarkers in dementia: clinical utility and new directions
- Encephalopathy in a 45-year-old woman: presented at the Advanced Clinical Neurology Course, Edinburgh 2010
- The clinical assessment of the patient with early dementia