Health Matters: Differences between Alzheimer's and dementia

FORT MYERS, FL -

Hank Graefen's mother-in-law suffered from dementia. When he and his wife became caretakers in her final years, they studied up on the condition.

"The more you can learn the better you're going to be and you better understand the disease."

Often used interchangeably, both dementia and Alzheimer's are forms of mental degradation. In many ways they seem the same but are actually two different medical terms.

"I tell people that its sort of like dementia is the team and Alzheimer's is one of the players," says Dr. Michael Raab, a geriatrician with Lee Memorial Health System.

Dementia covers a number of disorders; Alzheimer's is most common.

"Depending on who you believe, between 60% and 80% are caused by Alzheimer's disease," says Dr. Raab.

Alzheimer's has physical characteristics in the brain, which most other forms of dementia don't have.

"When you look at the brain, there are tangles and plaques. The Lewy Body dementias, the vascular dementias, the front dementias, none of them really have any plaques or tangles," says Dr. Raab.

What's more, Alzheimer's involves a gradual progression that can begin in middle age. General dementia is usually found in advanced years, Hank's mother-in-law was in her 90s.

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Health Matters: Differences between Alzheimer's and dementia

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