Dementia Causes and Risk Factors

illustration of a tree with leaves falling from it in a person's head
Dementia can be caused by a number of issues, but the eventual death of brain cells leads to the same results: loss of cognitive function and an inability to live a normal daily life.
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Dementia occurs when neurons (nerve cells) in the brain stop working, lose connections with other brain cells, and die.

The result is cognitive impairment and other changes that make it difficult for people to function in their daily lives.

The most common cause of dementia is Alzheimer’s disease, which is responsible for 60 to 80 percent of all cases. The other main forms of dementia are vascular dementia, Lewy body dementia, and frontotemporal disorders (also known as frontotemporal dementia).

Researchers believe that dementia may have a strong genetic link but that, with the exception of rare dementias caused by gene mutation, environment and lifestyle also play an important role. (1)

What Are the Causes of Vascular Dementia?

After Alzheimer’s disease, vascular dementia is the most frequent cause of dementia, accounting for about 10 percent of all cases. Still, many experts believe that vascular dementia, like Alzheimer’s disease, is under-diagnosed. (2)

Vascular dementia often coexists with other forms of dementia. Autopsy studies reveal that 50 percent of people with Alzheimer’s also had another form of dementia, most commonly vascular dementia. This is especially true of the “oldest-old” — people who are 85 and above.

Vascular dementia is caused by impaired blood flow to the brain, which prevents brain cells from getting the oxygen and nutrients they need.

A stroke that blocks an artery in the brain has the potential to cause permanent damage and dementia, and the more strokes one has, the higher one’s dementia risk. The severity of the stroke and its location in the brain determines its impact on thinking and reasoning.

Risk factors for vascular dementia overlap with those for heart disease and stroke. They include:

  • Age. Vascular dementia is rare before age 65; people in their 80s and 90s are most at risk.
  • History. Previous occurrences of heart attack, strokes, or mini strokes can increase risks.
  • High Cholesterol Heightened levels of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) or “bad” cholesterol correlate with increased dementia risk.
  • High Blood Pressure This condition puts extra stress on blood vessels, damaging those throughout the body — including the brain.
  • Smoking By damaging blood vessels, smoking raises the risk of both atherosclerosis and vascular dementia.
  • Obesity Carrying excess pounds heightens the risk of all kinds of vascular disease, potentially leading to vascular dementia.
  • Atrial Fibrillation Abnormal heart rhythms, caused when the upper chambers of the heart begin to beat rapidly and irregularly, can reduce blood flow to the brain and result in stroke and vascular dementia. (3)

What Are the Causes of Lewy Body Dementia?

Lewy bodies are abnormal clumps of the protein alpha-synuclein that accumulate in neurons in the brain. Lewy body dementia can develop when these clumps impede normal brain function, affecting thinking, movement, behavior, and mood.

Researchers are still trying to understand what causes Lewy body dementia. They’ve begun to correlate the accumulation of alpha-synuclein with the loss of neurons that produce two important neurotransmitters: acetylcholine, which plays a key role in learning and memory, and dopamine, which is important for behavior, cognition, mood, movement, and more.

The brains of people with Lewy body dementia can also exhibit the beta-amyloid (protein) plaques and tangled tau (protein) strands found in the brains of people with Alzheimer’s.

Risk factors include:

  • Age Most people who get this dementia are over 50.
  • Diseases and Health Problems People with Parkinson’s disease or REM sleep behavior disorder are at higher risk.
  • Genetics Lewy body dementia is not considered a genetic illness (with the exception of a very small number of cases linked to mutation) but having a relative with the disease seems to increase risk. (4)

What Causes Frontotemporal Dementia?

Frontotemporal disorders, commonly called frontotemporal dementia, develop when the frontal (front) and temporal (side) lobes of the brain atrophy.

Usually, there’s no clear explanation for why this happens; the only known risk factor is family history. Typically this dementia affects people younger than 65. Most are between 40 and 45.

The frontal and temporal lobes are the parts of the brain that are responsible for personality, behavior, and language. This explains why some people with these disorders undergo extreme personality changes and become impulsive, emotionally indifferent, or socially inappropriate. Other people lose their capacity to use language.

There are two main subtypes of frontotemporal disorders. One involves the build-up in the brain of the protein tau; the other, build-up of the protein TDP-43.

In some cases, atrophying parts of the brain contain microscopic tau-protein-filled structures, called Pick bodies, within the brain cells.

Researchers have recently identified genetic and molecular overlaps between these disorders and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease. Investigating those similarities may help scientists better understand and treat both conditions. (5)

When It Isn’t Dementia After All

While dementia often goes unreported and undiagnosed, depriving people who need help from getting it, there are situations in which people who appear to have dementia actually don’t.

The reason is that certain conditions — such as depression, delirium, side effects from medications, thyroid problems, certain vitamin deficiencies, and excessive alcohol use — can cause dementia-like symptoms.

One meta-analysis found that 9 percent of people who appeared to have dementia did not but were instead experiencing other potentially treatable or reversible conditions. (1)

Editorial Sources and Fact-Checking

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Resources

  1. 2022 Alzheimer’s Disease Facts and Figures [PDF]. Alzheimer’s Association. 2022.
  2. Vascular Dementia. Alzheimer’s Association.
  3. Vascular Dementia: Symptoms & Causes. Mayo Clinic. July 29, 2021.
  4. What Is Lewy Body Dementia? Causes, Symptoms, and Treatments. National Institute on Aging. July 29, 2021.
  5. Frontotemporal Dementia: Symptoms & Causes. Mayo Clinic. November 16, 2021.

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