Underrated and Underestimated – Deprivation in Dementia. A Case Report
S. C. Steininger, R. Frizi-Roser, S. Schneider, T.-V. Hoang, T. Zetzsche

TL;DR
This case report shows how social and sensory deprivation can worsen dementia symptoms, but these effects can be reversed with intensive, multimodal treatment.
Contribution
Highlights the reversible impact of deprivation on dementia symptoms through a detailed case study.
Findings
The patient showed significant improvement in speech, mobility, and vocalizations after multimodal treatment.
Deprivation from stimulus shielding likely contributed to symptom deterioration in a dementia patient.
High-intensity, multi-professional therapy can reverse deprivation-related symptoms in a few weeks.
Abstract
Deprivation is widely known in children and adolescents and means a lack of social, emotional, or sensory stimuli, due to disabilities such as deafness, but also social isolation and reduced parental care. It may cause developmental disorders such as impaired language, motoric and social development. Little is known of the impact of social deprivation in demented patients.Stimulus shielding, which is a widespread option for psychiatric symptoms of dementia such as agitation, vocalization and aggressive behavior may – if frequently used- have similar effects on demented patients. We report the case of a 71-year-old patient with dementia caused by PSP (Progressive Supranuclear Palsy), who was in inpatient treatment due to continuous undirected vocalizations. She presented with inability to walk, dysarthria, aphasia, and hearing difficulties beside major mnestic impairment. In a prior…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiet and metabolism studies · Alcoholism and Thiamine Deficiency · Fibromyalgia and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Research
