Sunday, February 8, 2026
ADVT 
Health

Watch For Behaviour Changes For Clues Of Dementia Onset

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Jul, 2016 12:24 PM
    WASHINGTON — Memory loss may not always be the first warning sign that dementia is brewing — changes in behaviour or personality might be an early clue.
     
    Researchers on Sunday outlined a syndrome called "mild behavioural impairment" that may be a harbinger of Alzheimer's or other dementias, and proposed a checklist of symptoms to alert doctors and families.
     
    Losing interest in favourite activities? Getting unusually anxious, aggressive or suspicious? Suddenly making crude comments in public?
     
    "Historically those symptoms have been written off as a psychiatric issue, or as just part of aging," said Dr. Zahinoor Ismail of the University of Calgary, who presented the checklist at the Alzheimer's Association International Conference in Toronto.
     
    Now, "when it comes to early detection, memory symptoms don't have the corner on the market anymore," he said.
     
     
    Alzheimer's, the most common form of dementia, affects more than 5 million people in the U.S., a number growing as the population ages. It gradually strips people of their memory and the ability to think and reason.
     
    But it creeps up, quietly ravaging the brain a decade or two before the first symptoms become noticeable. Early memory problems called "mild cognitive impairment," or MCI, can raise the risk of later developing dementia, and worsening memory often is the trigger for potential patients or their loved ones to seek medical help.
     
    It's not uncommon for people with dementia to experience neuropsychiatric symptoms, too — problems such as depression or "sundowning," agitation that occurs at the end of the day — as the degeneration spreads into brain regions responsible for more than memory. And previous studies have found that people with mild cognitive impairment are at greater risk of decline if they also suffer more subtle behavioural symptoms.
     
    What's new: The concept of pre-dementia "mild behavioural impairment," or MBI, a term that describes specific changes in someone's prior behaviour that might signal degeneration is starting in brain regions not as crucial for memory, he said.
     
    Ismail is part of an Alzheimer's Association committee tapped to draft a checklist of the symptoms that qualify — new problems that linger at least six months, not temporary symptoms or ones explained by a clear mental health diagnosis or other issues such as bereavement, he stressed. They include apathy, anxiety about once routine events, loss of impulse control, flaunting social norms, loss of interest in food. He even cites extreme cases, like a 68-year-old who started using cocaine before anyone noticed her memory trouble.
     
    If validated, the checklist could help doctors better identify people at risk of brewing Alzheimer's and study changes over time.
     
     
    "It's important for us to recognize that not everything's forgetfulness," said Dr. Ron Petersen, the Mayo Clinic's Alzheimer's research chief. He wasn't involved in developing the behaviour checklist but said it could raise awareness of the neuropsychiatric link with dementia.
     
    Technology specialist Mike Belleville of Douglas, Massachusetts, thought stress was to blame when he found himself getting easily frustrated and angry. Normally patient, he began snapping at co-workers and rolling down his window to yell at other drivers, "things I'd never done before," Belleville said.
     
    The final red flag was a heated argument with his wife, Cheryl, who found herself wondering, "Who is this person?" When Mike Belleville didn't remember the strong words the next morning, the two headed straight for a doctor. Physicians tested for depression and a list of other suspects. Eventually Belleville, now 55, was diagnosed with an early-onset form of dementia — and with medication no longer gets angry so easily, allowing him to volunteer his computer expertise.
     
    "If you see changes, don't take it lightly and assume it's stress," Cheryl Belleville advised.
     
    Also at Sunday's meeting:
     
    — Complex jobs that require working with people may help the brain build resilience against dementia, what's called "cognitive reserve," University of Wisconsin researchers reported.
     
     
    The team tested 284 adults in late middle-age whose brain scans showed changes that have been linked to an increased risk of Alzheimer's. Comparing their cognitive ability and their careers, the researchers found those who worked primarily with people, rather than objects or data, functioned better even if brain scans showed more of that quiet damage.
     
    — Preliminary results from a study of "brain training" suggested one type might help delay cognitive impairment.
     
    Researchers examined records from 2,785 older adults who'd participated in a previous trial that compared three cognitive training strategies — to improve memory, reasoning or reaction times —with no intervention. A decade later, that reaction-time training suggested benefit: 12 per cent of people who'd completed up to 10 hours had evidence of cognitive decline or dementia compared with 14 per cent in the control group, said Dr. Jerri Edwards of the University of South Florida. The figure was lower — 8 per cent — for people who got some extra booster training.
     
    "It's the first hint for a cognitive training intervention like this," but more research is needed, said Dr. Jonathan King of the National Institute on Aging, who wasn't involved in the new study.
     
    ___
     
    Take a 360 Video journey inside the brain, exploring some of the factors that contribute to Alzheimer's disease. For the best viewing experience, use a Google Cardboard and enable your Wi-Fi.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    What Can Help You Live Up To 100 Years

    What Can Help You Live Up To 100 Years
    Tracking 855 Swedish men born in 1913, researchers have come to the conclusion that refraining from smoking, maintaining healthy cholesterol levels and having not more than four cups of coffee a day can help you live to 100.

    What Can Help You Live Up To 100 Years

    Save Your Skin In Summer With Vitamin C

    Save Your Skin In Summer With Vitamin C
    Britain's expert nutritionist Jacqueline Newson shares the lesser known benefits of the antioxidant and talks about the best way to get vitamin C into your cells

    Save Your Skin In Summer With Vitamin C

    Hopping Food Brands May Lead To Overeating

    Hopping Food Brands May Lead To Overeating
    People who eat different types and brands of commonly available food items, such as pizza, are more likely to overeat than people who tend to consume the same brand, says a new study.

    Hopping Food Brands May Lead To Overeating

    Extra Two Minutes Walking Can Add Years To Your Life

    Extra Two Minutes Walking Can Add Years To Your Life
    A "trade-off" of sitting for light intensity activities for two minutes each hour is associated with a 33 percent lower risk of dying, the findings showed.

    Extra Two Minutes Walking Can Add Years To Your Life

    Hide Food At Homes, If You Want To Shed Weight

    Hide Food At Homes, If You Want To Shed Weight
    Having a low self-esteem related to one's weight and keeping food visibly available around the house, outside the kitchen, may increase your likelihood of being obese, says a new research.

    Hide Food At Homes, If You Want To Shed Weight

    Watching TV For Just An Hour Daily Makes Kids Gain Weight

    Watching TV For Just An Hour Daily Makes Kids Gain Weight
    Watching television for as little as one hour a day can make your children obese, says a new study.

    Watching TV For Just An Hour Daily Makes Kids Gain Weight