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Education · know your opponent

Which dementia is it?

"Dementia" is the umbrella; underneath are different diseases with different patterns, and knowing yours changes daily care, what to expect next, and in one case, hospital safety. If nobody has named the type, ask the doctor directly: "Which type do you believe this is, and how confident are we?"

Alzheimer's disease: the most common

Vascular dementia: the stepwise one

After a stroke: the road can climb

Vascular damage is steps, not a slope, and the space between steps can be stable or genuinely improving. If a recent stroke caused the deficits, work the recovery window:

  • Speech-language therapy now, and fight for intensity. Aphasia therapy has real evidence, Medicare covers it, and gains are fastest early but continue past a year. If a course ended, ask for a re-evaluation. Ask about aphasia groups: low-cost, social, and made for people who still love company.
  • When speech flows but most of it is hard to follow (fluent aphasia): respond to the tone, not the words; keep your side to one short idea, then wait; offer two choices while holding the objects; never quiz, never correct. Find the islands that survive (singing, prayers, counting, greetings) and visit them daily. Ask the speech therapist about singing-based approaches.
  • Ask the doctor to screen for post-stroke depression, even if they seem cheerful. It is common, it masquerades as \u201cnot trying,\u201d it stalls recovery, and it is treatable.
  • The most powerful therapy is preventing the next stroke: blood pressure actually controlled, pills actually swallowed, follow-ups actually kept.
  • Track it to see what helps: the behavior log takes three taps. Note the hour, fatigue, lighting, and noise: speech, recognition, and confusion all dip at dusk, when tired, in dim light, and when sick. A sudden drop over hours or days is a same-day doctor call (infection and delirium are treatable), not \u201cprogression.\u201d

Lewy body dementia: the one with a safety rule

The safety rule every Lewy body family must know: many people with LBD have severe, sometimes life-threatening reactions to common antipsychotic drugs (like haloperidol), the very drugs ERs and hospitals reach for when a patient is agitated. Say it at every hospital visit, to every new clinician: "Suspected Lewy body dementia. No antipsychotics without the neurologist." Put it on a card in their wallet and yours. A printable one is on the emergency page, and the hospital survival guide covers the rest of the stay.

Parkinson's disease dementia: the cousin

Frontotemporal dementia (FTD): the young one

The impostors: always rule these out first

Watch The ten early signs, explained warmly on camera, useful for the relative who "doesn't see it": the signs & stages shelf.

Hearing loss: the imposter and the accelerant

Mixed dementia: the common reality

Especially past 80, autopsy studies show most people have more than one pathology: usually Alzheimer's plus vascular. If the picture doesn't fit one tidy box, that's normal. Care by what you observe, not by the label's stereotype.

Why bother getting the type named?

Three reasons: safety (the Lewy body drug rule above), treatment (vascular risk control; which medications may help or harm), and expectations (steps vs. slopes vs. fluctuations; knowing your pattern stops you from panicking at the pattern). If the diagnosis was just "dementia," a neurologist or memory clinic visit to name it is worth the wait for the appointment.

“Now if any of you lacks wisdom, he should ask God, who gives generously to all without finding fault, and it will be given to him.”

James 1:5