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Early Sign of Alzheimer's
- Difficulty performing otherwise familiar tasks, such as preparing a meal, opening a car window
or using a household appliance can be signs of Alzheimer's disease.
- Memory loss that affects job skills. It is normal to occasionally forget an assignment or a
colleagues phone number, but it is not normal to frequently forget such things or to become
so confused that you are unable to concentrate and can not perform your job functions.
- Problems using language may be a sign of Alzheimer's disease. Although it is normal to forget
words, people with Alzheimer's disease may become hard to understand and may substitute
unusual words or phrases for forgotten ones. A person with Alzheimer's disease may appear to
have become less fluent and may also have difficulty writing coherently.
- Disorientation to time and place. It is normal to sometimes lose track of time or to become lost,
but a person with Alzheimer's can forget what year it is and can become lost on familiar streets
and not be able to find their way home.
- Loss of good judgment may also be a warning sign of Alzheimer's disease. This could take the
form of wearing inappropriate clothing (e.g. pajamas worn outside in winter) or suddenly giving
away large amounts of money.
- Problems with abstract thinking. It is normal to make a mistake balancing a checkbook, but
people with Alzheimer's disease may forget the meaning of numbers or what to do with them.
- Misplacing things. It is normal to misplace things occasionally, but putting things in
unusual places, like an iron in the refrigerator or a watch in the sugar bowl are warning signs
of Alzheimer's disease.
- Rapid mood swings such as unexplained anger or going from apparent calm to sudden crying can
be warning signs of Alzheimer's disease.
- Personality changes. As people age, their personalities may also gradually change, but for a person
with Alzheimer's disease the changes in personality are often sudden and dramatic.
- Loss of initiative, sleeping longer than usual and loss of interest in the usual activities can be signs
of depression, but are also warning signs of Alzheimer's disease.
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