Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is a slight decrease in a patient’s cognitive function compared to a higher premorbid level. Symptoms remain objectively invisible, but the patients themselves complain of forgetfulness, difficulty concentrating, and rapid fatigue during mental work. 

Diagnosing mild cognitive impairment involves pathopsychological and neuropsychological research of the intellectual sphere, a conversation with a psychiatrist, and an examination by a neurologist. The treatment of mild cognitive impairment is aimed at eliminating the cause of the cognitive impairment, including psycho-correctional sessions, drug therapy, and adherence to diet and daily regimen. 

Mild cognitive impairment is more susceptible to older people, among those over 65 – for which the prevalence is 10%. Of this group, 10-15% develop symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease during their latter years. MCI is more often diagnosed in people with a low level of education.

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Causes of mild cognitive impairment

Mild cognitive impairment is not a nosologically separate condition, but a condition that occupies an intermediate position between normal intellectual development and dementia.

By origin, it is heterogeneous (polyetiological), and the causes of development can be a variety of pathological processes in the central nervous system including:

Pathogenesis

The pathogenetic mechanisms of MCI are diverse and are dependent on the leading etiological factor. In old age, the processes associated with aging are influenced by the weakening of attention, focus, and memory. 

Clinical and experimental psychological studies confirm that age-related deterioration of cognitive functions develops independently, without concomitant neuropsychiatric diseases against the natural aging processes of the central nervous system.

In 68% of cases, MCI occurs based on cerebrovascular disorders such as pathological changes in cerebral vessels and cerebral circulation insufficiency. 

Degenerative damage to brain tissue (atrophy) is quite common for patients that suffer from MCI. Another 13-15% of elderly and senile patients have anxiety-depressive disorders and tend to exaggerate the severity of memory impairments.

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Symptoms of mild cognitive impairment

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It is common to have headaches and a sense of heaviness in the head, general weakness, drowsiness, and dizziness. Ailments are non-systemic, during the day they have different intensities, in many patients, they are noted in the morning and the evening. 

The condition worsens after mental and physical exertion. The length of MCI depends on the underlying disease, it can be fluctuating (often with cerebrovascular shifts), progressive, and turning into dementia (with atrophic processes, tumors and infections)

Future complications of mild cognitive impairment

Mild cognitive impairment can quickly lead to dementia if left untreated. Patients will lose the ability to solve everyday tasks and will need daily help with self-care.

Socialization is impaired – the circle of contacts is narrowed; patients cannot perform professional duties or attend social events. With a fluctuating course of the disorder, patients may experience difficulties while performing intense mental tasks, but with a strict regimen and a decrease in stress, they maintain their usual vital activity.Read Next: What is Dementia?

Diagnostics

MCI examination is performed by a neurologist, psychiatrist, and clinical psychologist. For diagnosis, a criterion is determined by considering the emphasis on memory loss, the general state of the cognitive sphere, the absence of dementia, oligophrenia, and psychogenic syndrome. The following methods are used:

Treating mild cognitive impairment

Mild cognitive impairment therapy is aimed at preventing dementia, slowing down the rate of cognitive decline, and eliminating existing amnestic disorders. The main therapeutic measures – isotropic, pathogenetic – are aimed at the cause of the disorder. Common therapies include:

References

Further Reading

Last Updated: May 31, 2022

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Dmitry Dorofeev

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Dmitry Dorofeev

After completing his bachelor’s degree in market research and psychology in 2019 in New Zealand and Germany, Dmitry moved to London to pursue a career within the healthcare sector to oversee research projects in science and medicine, with a focus on how innovative technologies help drive and shape this industry.