Exams and Tests
Doctors diagnose the cause of
dementia by asking questions about the person's
medical history and doing a physical exam, a
mental status exam, and lab and imaging tests.
Tests can help the doctor learn whether dementia is caused by a
treatable condition. Even for those dementias that cannot be reversed, knowing
the type of dementia a person has can help the doctor prescribe medicines or
other treatments that may improve mood and behavior and help the family.
Medical history
During a
medical history and physical exam, the doctor will ask
the affected person and a close relative or partner about recent illnesses or
other life events that could cause memory loss or other symptoms such as
behavioral problems. The doctor may ask the person to bring in all medicines he
or she takes. This can help the doctor determine whether the problem might be
caused by the person being overmedicated or having a drug interaction.
Although a person may have more than one illness causing
dementia, symptoms sometimes can distinguish one form from another. For
example, early in the course of
frontotemporal dementia people may display a lack of
social awareness and develop obsessions with eating, neither of which occurs
early in other dementias.
Mental status exam
A doctor or other health professional will conduct a
mental status exam. This test usually involves such
activities as having the person tell what day and year it is, repeat a series
of words, draw a clock face, and count back from 100 by 7s.
Other tests have been developed to diagnose dementia. Doctors can
use one such test, Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination, to distinguish
Alzheimer's disease from frontotemporal dementia.
Orientation, attention, and memory are worse in Alzheimer's, while language
skills and ability to name objects are worse in frontotemporal
dementia.8
Lab tests
Numerous medical conditions can cause mental impairment. During a
physical exam, the doctor will look for signs of other medical conditions and
have lab tests done to find any treatable condition. Routine tests include:
Other lab tests that may be done include:
Imaging tests
Many experts recommend that people being assessed for dementia
have a brain imaging test such as
MRI or
CT scan.9 These tests may
rule out brain tumors,
strokes,
normal-pressure hydrocephalus, or other conditions
that could cause dementia symptoms.
MRI can show shrinkage in
parts of
the brain
that occurs in some types of dementia. MRI and CT scan also
can show evidence of strokes from
vascular dementia.
Two other forms of imaging—single photon emission CT (SPECT) and
PET scan—are not used routinely to diagnose dementia.
But they may be useful if the symptoms are confusing or odd. These tests can
help identify several forms of dementia, including vascular dementia and
frontotemporal dementia.
In some cases, electrical activity in the brain may be measured
using an
electroencephalogram (EEG). Doctors seldom use this
test to diagnose dementia, but they may use it to distinguish dementia from
delirium and to look for unusual brain activity found
in Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, a rare cause of dementia.
In rare cases, a brain
biopsy may be done if a treatable cause of dementia is
suspected.
After death, an
autopsy may be done to find out for sure what caused
dementia. This information may be helpful to family members concerned about
genetic causes. For more information, see the topic
Alzheimer's Disease.