Research over the past two decades supports a shared aetiology for delusions in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and schizophrenia. Functional networks involved in salience attribution and belief evaluation have been implicated in the two conditions, and striatal D2/3 receptors are increased to a comparable extent. Executive/frontal deficits are common to both disorders and predict emergent symptoms. Putative risk genes for schizophrenia, which may modify the AD process, have been more strongly implicated in delusions than those directly linked with late-onset AD. Phenotypic correlates of delusions in AD may be dependent upon delusional subtype. Persecutory delusions occur early in the disease and are associated with neurochemical and neuropathological changes in frontostriatal circuits. In contrast, misidentification delusions are associated with greater global cognitive deficits and advanced limbic pathology. It is unclear whether the two subtypes are phenomenologically and biologically distinct or are part of a continuum, in which misidentification delusions manifest increasingly as the pathological process extends. This has treatment implications, particularly if they are found to have discrete chemical and/or pathological markers.
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