RIVASTIGMINE FOR THE

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Rivastigmine for vascular cognitive impairment Audio summaries | Evidence Aid summaries | Cochrane Methodology abstracts Although existing trial data indicated some benefit of rivastigmine in VCI, these were derived from studies which had small numbers of patients, and which compared rivastigmine to treatments other than placebo or extrapolated results post hoc from large studies involving patients with Alzheimer's disease and vascular risk factors of unclear significance. They could not be included in this review. Proper randomized placebo-controlled double-blind trials involving patients with VCI are needed before any conclusions regarding the use of rivastigmine in VCI can be drawn. Vascular dementia represents the second most common type of dementia. The classification of vascular dementia broadly follows three clinico-pathological processes: multi-infarct dementia, single strategic infarct dementia and subcortical dementia. Not all victims fulfil strict criteria for dementia and may be significantly cognitively impaired without memory loss and the term vascular cognitive impairment is more useful. Currently, no established standard treatment for vascular cognitive impairment exists. Reductions in acetylcholine and acetyltransferase activity are common to both Alzheimer's disease and vascular cognitive impairment raising the possibility that cholinesterase inhibitors like rivastigmine may be beneficial for the latter.