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Understanding Dementia Symptoms
WebMD Health News
Dementia is the loss of mental functions -- such
as thinking, memory, and reasoning -- that is
severe enough to interfere with a person's daily
functioning. Dementia is not a disease itself,
but rather a group of symptoms that are caused
by various diseases or conditions.
Symptoms can also include changes in
personality, mood, and behavior. In some cases,
the dementia can be treated and cured because
the cause is treatable. Examples of this include
dementia caused by substance abuse (illicit
drugs and alcohol), combinations of prescription
medications, and hormone or vitamin imbalances.
In some cases, although the person may appear to
have dementia, a severe depression can be
causing the symptoms. This is known as
pseudo-dementia (false dementia) and is highly
treatable. In most cases, however, a true
dementia cannot be cured.
Dementia develops when the parts of the brain
that are involved with learning, memory,
decision-making, and language are affected by
one or more of a variety of infections or
diseases. The most common cause of dementia is
Alzheimer's disease, but there are as many
as 50 other known causes. Most of these causes
are very rare.
Because some causes of dementia can be cured or
partially treated, it is very important that
your doctor is thorough when making the
diagnosis, so as not to miss potentially
treatable conditions. The frequency of
"treatable" causes of dementia is believed to be
about 10%.
What Causes Dementia?
There are several things that could cause
dementia:
-
Diseases that cause
degeneration or loss of nerve cells in the
brain such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and
Huntington's.
-
Diseases that affect blood
vessels, such as stroke, which can cause a
disorder known as multi-infarct dementia.
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Toxic reactions, like
excessive alcohol or drug use.
-
Nutritional deficiencies,
like vitamin B12 and folate deficiency.
-
Infections that affect the
brain and spinal cord, such as AIDS dementia
complex and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.
-
Certain types of
hydrocephalus, an accumulation of fluid in
the brain that can result from developmental
abnormalities, infections, injury, or brain
tumors.
-
Head injury -- either a
single severe head injury or longer term
smaller injuries, like in boxers.
-
Illnesses other than in the
brain, such as kidney, liver, and lung
diseases, can all lead to dementia.
Alzheimer's disease causes 50% to 60% of all
dementias. But researchers have found that two
nervous diseases, which were originally
incorrectly diagnosed as Alzheimer's, are
emerging as major causes of dementia: Lewy body
disease and Pick's disease.
How Common Is Dementia?
Dementia caused by nervous system disease,
especially Alzheimer's disease, is increasing in
frequency more than most other types of
dementia. Some researchers suspect that as many
as half of all people over 80 years old develop
Alzheimer's disease. Also, the increased
incidence of AIDS dementia complex, which
results from HIV infection, helps account for
the increased dementia in recent history,
although with the invention of newer and better
drugs to treat HIV, the occurrence of
AIDS-associated dementia is declining
Who Gets Dementia?
Dementia is considered a late-life disease
because it tends to develop mostly in elderly
people. About 5% to 8% of all people over the
age of 65 have some form of dementia, and this
number doubles every five years above that age.
It is estimated that as many as half of people
in their 80s suffer from dementia.
Which Dementias Are Treatable?
-
Dementia due to long-term
substance abuse.
-
Tumors that can be removed.
-
Subdural hematoma,
accumulation of blood beneath the outer
covering of the brain is the result of a
broken blood vessel, usually the result of a
head injury.
-
Normal-pressure
hydrocephalus.
-
Metabolic disorders, such as
a vitamin B12 deficiency.
-
Hypothyroidism, a condition
that results from an underactive thyroid.
-
Hypoglycemia, a condition
that results from low blood sugar.
What Are Some of the Untreatable
Causes of Dementia?
-
Alzheimer's disease.
-
Multi-infarct dementia
(Dementia due to multiple small strokes).
-
Dementias associated with
Parkinson's disease and similar disorders.
-
AIDS dementia complex.
-
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD),
a quickly progressing and fatal disease that
consists of dementia and muscle twitching
and spasm.
© WebMD Inc. All rights reserved.
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Dementia develops when the parts of the brain
that are involved with learning, memory,
decision-making, and language are affected by
one or more of a variety of infections or
diseases.
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