Bizarre warning signs of dementia revealed after Bruce Willis’ devastating diagnosis
It’s the cruel, memory-robbing disease that blights the lives of millions of people across the world.
Yet charities claim not enough is being done to teach society about the potential warning signs of dementia.
With legendary Hollywood actor Bruce Willis becoming the latest to be diagnosed with the incurable disorder, MailOnline has now shared some of the stranger early symptoms that can occur.
The 67-year-old Die Hard icon has frontotemporal dementia (FTD) — which causes problems with behaviour and language.
It’s one of the least common forms of dementia, accounting for just two per cent of diagnoses. Alzheimer’s is the most widespread type of dementia — making up three in four cases.
Bruce Willis has been given a second devastating diagnosis less than year after it emerged he had an untreatable brain disorder (Pictured in 2019 at the European premier of Glass in 2021)
Changes in humour and swearing more are all signs of Alzheimer’s and frontotemporal dementia (FTD) — a type of dementia that causes problems with behaviour and language. According to experts bad parking, and dressing scruffy are also signs of the memory-robbing disease. Graphic shows: Six signs of Alzheimer’s disease
Giving out money
Giving out cash to strangers could be an early warning sign of Alzheimer’s.
That is according to research by USC and Bar-Ilan University in Israel, which linked financial altruism to the first stages of the disease.
The study tested the theory on 67 adults around the age of 70.
The participants were put in pairs with people they had never met, and were given $10 (£8) to distribute between themselves and the other.
Neurological tests were given to the participants to judge their cognitive state and their potential risk of developing Alzheimer’s.
The results, published in the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease, suggested those who were at a higher risk of developing Alzheimer’s were also more willing to hand out money to the person they had never met.
Dr Duke Han, a neuropsychology professor at USC who led the research, said: ‘Trouble handling money is thought to be one of the early signs of Alzheimer’s disease, and this finding supports that notion.’
What is Alzheimer’s?
Alzheimer’s disease is a progressive, degenerative disease of the brain, in which build-up of abnormal proteins causes nerve cells to die.
This disrupts the transmitters that carry messages, and causes the brain to shrink.
More than 5 million people suffer from the disease in the US, where it is the 6th leading cause of death, and more than 1 million Britons have it.
WHAT HAPPENS?
As brain cells die, the functions they provide are lost.
That includes memory, orientation and the ability to think and reason.
The progress of the disease is slow and gradual.
On average, patients live five to seven years after diagnosis, but some may live for ten to 15 years.
EARLY SYMPTOMS: