Diagnosis Of Dementias Other Than Alzheimer’s Can Affect Care : Shots

Various forms of dementia can take very different courses, so it’s important to get the right diagnosis.



Mehau Kulyk/Science Source

In the U.S., older people with dementia are usually told they have Alzheimer’s disease.

But a range of other brain diseases can also impair thinking, and memory and judgment, according to scientists attending a summit on dementias held Thursday and Friday at the National Institutes of Health.

These include strokes, a form of Parkinson’s disease, and a disease that damages brain areas that regulate emotion and behavior.

“There’s a host of things that can cause loss of cognitive function,” says Dr. Julie Schneider, a professor at the Rush Alzheimer’s Disease Center in Chicago and scientific chair of the NIH summit. And many patients have more than one disease affecting the brain, she says.

Most of these diseases can’t be stopped, Schneider says. But it’s important that families get the right diagnosis in order to get the best care and plan for the future.

The emphasis on non-Alzheimer’s dementias reflects a change in doctors’ understanding of what happens to aging brains.

When Schneider was training to be a doctor in the 1980s and ’90s, dementia was simple. “We were taught that almost all dementia is Alzheimer’s disease,” she says.

But since then, studies have shown that 20 percent to 40 percent of the nation’s 5.8 million dementia patients have some other disease.

Statistics from the Alzheimer’s Association show that some of the most common are:

  • Vascular disease, which is caused by a stroke or blood vessel damage and accounts for up to 10 percent of all dementia cases.
  • Lewy body disease, which is related to Parkinson’s disease, also accounts for up to 10 percent of dementia patients.
  • Frontotemporal lobar degeneration, which affects areas of the brain involved in personality, language and behavior. It accounts for less than 10 percent of dementia cases.

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