What is Dementia?
Dementia is a broad term that can include many different types of dementia. What all dementias have in common is that they are serious forms of cognitive impairment that impact 2 or more brain functions. For example, a person with dementia may have trouble with memory loss and muscle motor skills, or they may have issues with decision making and behavior. One single symptom, for example ,memory loss, does not equal dementia.
Are Dementia and Alzheimer’s Disease the Same Thing?
In a way, yes. Alzheimer’s disease is one type of dementia, and in fact is one of the most common forms of dementia seen today. Not all people with dementia have that specific type of dementia.
How is Dementia Diagnosed?
Physical examinations, memory testing, and brain imaging are all common ways to form a dementia diagnosis. Only a neurologist should make a dementia diagnosis, as this type of doctor has the most specific training in the function of the brain.
Why Does Dementia Happen?
Although there may be certain genes that predispose a person to dementia, in the great majority of all dementia cases genetics does not serve as the sole explanation for the development of dementia. The biggest risk factor for dementia is age. As a person gets older, and particularly as they enter their geriatric years, the chance of dementia increases. It is possible that factors like obesity and the presence of diabetes may impact the development of dementia, as well.
How Does Dementia Progress?
It is different for every person. In some people, the development is rapid, but in many people, dementia reveals itself more slowly. People who are in the later stages of dementia may often still have “good days” and “bad days,” for example. The focus of treatment is to try to keep the good days as numerous as possible through medications and other treatments as necessary.
Call WeCare Neurology, or make an appointment online today, if you’re concerned about Dementia/Memory issues. Various Computerized Cognitive/memory testings by Cambridge Brain Sciences are now offered to accurately diagnose the specific types of Dementia.
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