What is the life expectancy of a person with dementia?

You can live with dementia for varying lengths, but on average, people live 4 to 8 years after diagnosis, though this can range from a few years to 20 years or more, depending heavily on the type of dementia, age at diagnosis, overall health, and other factors like genetics and lifestyle. Alzheimer's often has a longer prognosis (around 8-10 years), while other types like Vascular Dementia or Dementia with Lewy Bodies might have shorter averages (around 5-6 years).

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What's the longest you can live with dementia?

The average life expectancy of people diagnosed with dementia ranges from 9 years at age 60 to 4.5 years at age 85 for women and from 6.5 to just over 2 years, respectively, in men, finds a systematic review of the latest evidence in The BMJ today.

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What are the worst stages of dementia?

In late-stage severe dementia due to Alzheimer's disease, people generally:

  • Lose the ability to communicate. Individuals can no longer converse or speak in ways that make sense. ...
  • Require daily assistance with personal care. ...
  • Experience a decline in physical abilities.

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Has anyone ever recovered from dementia?

When someone gets the diagnosis of dementia, a cure is only very rarely possible (see p2 About Reversible Dementias). In the current issue of Neurology, Sacks and Shulman1 report one of these rare cases of a reversal of dementia involving a patient on steroid medication.

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Can you slow down dementia with medication?

Although no current medications stop, slow down or reverse dementia, some can temporarily help a person with their memory and thinking.

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How Long Does Someone With Dementia Live?

24 related questions found

What speeds up dementia decline?

Smoking, low physical activity, and a poor diet are all lifestyle and environmental influences that have been linked to rapid dementia decline. Physical activity promotes cardiovascular health, which in turn improves brain function. Those who lead a sedentary lifestyle may experience faster cognitive decline.

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Who is financially responsible for a person with dementia?

While family caregivers often provide the primary daily support for individuals with dementia, legal responsibility for decision-making and financial management can fall to spouses, adult children (depending on filial responsibility laws), or court-appointed guardians or conservators, especially in the absence of a ...

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What is the average age of death for someone with dementia?

Life expectancy with dementia varies greatly but averages a few years to over a decade, often 4 to 8 years for Alzheimer's, depending heavily on age at diagnosis (younger means longer), type (Alzheimer's generally longer than Vascular), and other health conditions, with newer research showing averages like 5.1 years for women and 4.3 for men from diagnosis, but with wide ranges from shorter for older adults to longer for some. 

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What is the Happy Pill for dementia patients?

Seroquel is the brand name for quetiapine, an atypical antipsychotic that is used off-label to treat severe behavioral signs of dementia. It can help with bad symptoms, including agitation, aggressiveness, and hallucinations, that other drugs don't help with.

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What is the number one trigger for dementia?

The number one cause of dementia is Alzheimer's disease, responsible for 60-80% of cases, characterized by brain plaques (beta-amyloid protein) and tangles (tau protein) that damage nerve cells, leading to progressive memory and cognitive decline, though vascular dementia from blood vessel damage is also a significant factor. 

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How long before dementia is fatal?

Alzheimer's disease – around eight to 10 years. Life expectancy is less if the person is diagnosed in their 80s or 90s. A few people with Alzheimer's live for longer, sometimes for 15 or even 20 years. Vascular dementia – around five years.

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What is the 2 finger test in dementia?

The "2-finger test" for dementia involves an examiner showing a hand gesture (like interlocking index and middle fingers) and asking the patient to copy it, testing motor skills, visual memory, and coordination, as difficulties can signal early cognitive decline, but it's a screening tool, not a definitive diagnosis, prompting further medical evaluation. Other related tests include finger-tapping and finger-to-nose, looking for hesitation or misjudgment in movement. 

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What stage of dementia is not bathing?

At approximately the same point in the evolution of AD, but generally just a little later in the temporal sequence, AD persons lose the ability to bathe without assistance (stage 6b).

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Do dementia patients do better at home?

Remaining at home but with extra support can be a good option for some people with dementia. It allows them to stay in a place that feels familiar and safe to them. It is important to make sure that the person can remain safe and well and get the support they need at home.

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What is the best medication for dementia?

Donepezil (also known as Aricept), rivastigmine (Exelon) and galantamine (Reminyl) are used to treat the symptoms of mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease. Donepezil is also used to treat more severe Alzheimer's disease.

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What vitamin cuts dementia risk by 40%?

Vitamin D supplements are linked to a significant reduction in dementia risk, with a major study showing users had a 40% lower incidence of developing dementia compared to non-users, particularly benefiting older adults, with even greater effects seen in women and those without existing cognitive issues. This reduction highlights Vitamin D's role in brain health, possibly by clearing amyloid plaques associated with Alzheimer's. 

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How to keep someone with dementia happy?

Build quiet times into the day, along with activities. Keep well-loved objects and photographs around the house to help the person feel more secure. Remind the person who you are if he or she doesn't remember, but try not to say, “Don't you remember?” Encourage a two-way conversation for as long as possible.

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What are the 10 warning signs of dementia?

The 10 warning signs of dementia include memory loss, difficulty with familiar tasks, confusion about time/place, trouble with language, poor judgment, misplacing things, personality changes, loss of initiative, and problems with visual/spatial skills, requiring professional assessment to distinguish from normal aging. 

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How many people with dementia live at home?

Currently, there is up to an estimated 120,000 people living alone with dementia in the UK. This number is predicted to double to around 240,000 by 2039.

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Should someone with dementia go to a funeral?

It's not always a good idea for someone with dementia to be involved in the formal part of the funeral. It can be extremely upsetting and intense if they forget that their loved one has died and then are reminded of it again at the funeral.

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What stage of dementia is bowel incontinence?

Generally, urinary incontinence occurs first (stage 6d), then fecal incontinence occurs (stage 6e). The incontinence can be treated, or even initially prevented entirely in many cases, by frequent toileting.

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Will Medicare pay for a person with dementia?

Medicare covers inpatient hospital care and some of the doctors' fees and other medical items for people living with Alzheimer's or another dementia who are age 65 or older. Medicare Part D also covers many prescription drugs.

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How do nursing homes keep dementia patients in bed at night?

Nursing homes use many strategies to ensure that dementia patients stay in bed at night. Some of the practices that they employ are monitoring the sleep environment, taking residents to the washroom at regular intervals, and using bed alarms to alert if anyone is getting out of bed.

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Who pays for a dementia care home?

If the assessment suggests a care home would be the best option, the next step is a financial assessment (means test). The financial assessment will show if the council will pay towards the cost of a care home. In most cases, the person with dementia will be expected to pay towards the cost.

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