Alzheimer's DiseaseSymptomsMemory loss is usually the first sign of
Alzheimer's disease. Many older people may worry about
Alzheimer's disease if they start to have memory problems. Having some
short-term memory loss in your 60s and 70s is common, and some people with mild
memory problems will go on to develop Alzheimer's disease. If you start having
memory problems, share your concerns with your family and your doctor. Examples of normal forgetfulness include
forgetting: - Parts of an experience.
- Where the
car is parked.
- Events from the distant past.
- A person's
name, remembering it later.
- Where you left an object, such as your
car keys.
Examples of memory loss caused by Alzheimer's
disease include forgetting: - An entire experience.
- How to drive
a car or read a clock.
- Recent events, such as forgetting you left
the stove on.
- Ever having known a particular person.
Alzheimer's disease also causes changes in thinking, behavior, and
personality. Early in the disease, the person may still behave appropriately in
social situations, leading others to believe that the person is not ill. Close
family members and friends may first notice the symptoms of Alzheimer's
disease, although the person may also realize that something is wrong. Learn
the warning signs of dementia—such as having difficulty
thinking or remembering, or having trouble balancing a checkbook—and talk to a
doctor if a friend or family member has developed any of the signs. Symptoms
vary as the disease progresses. The Alzheimer's Association has identified 10 warning signs for
Alzheimer's disease. These signs are:2 - Memory loss, such as forgetting recently
learned information like names and phone numbers.
- Difficulty
performing familiar tasks, such as cooking a meal.
- Problems with
language, such as forgetting simple words or substituting unusual
words.
- Disorientation as to time and place, such as forgetting
where you live on your street.
- Poor or decreased judgment, such as
dressing improperly for the weather or giving away large sums of money to
strangers.
- Problems with abstract thinking, such as not being able
to balance a checkbook or understand what numbers
represent.
- Misplacing things, like putting an iron in the freezer
or a wristwatch in the sugar bowl.
- Changes in mood or behavior,
such as rapid mood swings—from calm to tears to anger—for no apparent
reason.
- Changes in personality, such as becoming extremely
confused, suspicious, fearful, or dependent on a family
member.
- Loss of initiative, such as sleeping all the time, watching
television all day, or not wanting to do any usual activities.
Symptoms that may be but are not always present include: - Firmly held false beliefs (delusions), such as that someone is stealing from the
person.
- Seeing or hearing things that aren't really there (hallucinations).
- Lack of interest in
surroundings or activities, or withdrawal from family and
friends.
- Purposeless activity, such as opening and closing a purse,
packing and unpacking clothing, pacing, or repeating demands or
questions.
- Verbal and physical aggression.
- Inability to
control impulses, which may lead to unusual or inappropriate actions. Men are
somewhat more likely than women to exhibit behavior problems such as wandering,
abusiveness, and social impropriety.
Early in the disease, Alzheimer's usually does not affect a
person's fine motor skills (such as the ability to button or unbutton clothes
or use utensils) or sense of touch. A person who develops motor symptoms (such
as weakness or shaking hands) or sensory symptoms (such as numbness) probably
has a condition other than Alzheimer's disease. Conditions such as
Parkinson's disease, for instance, may cause motor
symptoms along with dementia. Other conditions with symptoms similar to those of Alzheimer's
disease may include:
| |