Your parent repeats a question, misplaces keys, forgets a neighbour's name. Some of this is normal ageing — some is a quiet signal worth checking. Knowing the difference, calmly, changes everything.
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Your father asks the same question twice in an hour. Your mother can't find a word she's used all her life. A small, cold worry starts: is this just age, or something more? Both can be true — and telling them apart, without panic, is the most useful thing you can do.
Here is the calm version. Some slowing of memory is a normal part of growing older. Forgetting a name and recalling it later, or briefly misplacing your glasses, is everyday ageing. Dementia is different: it is when memory and thinking decline enough to disrupt daily life — and that is not 'just old age' and never 'paagalpan' or madness.
This is general information, not a diagnosis. If the changes are disrupting daily life, see a doctor for a proper assessment — early action and support genuinely help.
The brain runs on billions of nerve cells that talk to each other through tiny connections. In dementia, these cells and their connections are slowly damaged and lost, so the messages start to fail. The result is the everyday picture families notice — memory slipping, words going missing, confusion with time and place. Dementia is not one disease but a group of conditions, defined by this decline in thinking that disrupts normal life.
Alzheimer's is the most common type, behind most cases. In it, abnormal proteins build up in and around brain cells, choking the connections, usually starting in the memory areas — which is why recent memory often goes first while older memories linger.
The second common type is vascular dementia. Here the damage comes from poor blood supply to the brain, often after small or large strokes. Many older people have a mix of both.
Importantly, not every cause is permanent. Low vitamin B12, an underactive thyroid, depression, certain medicines, infections and even poor sleep can produce dementia-like forgetfulness — and these often improve once treated. That is exactly why a doctor checks for them.
What dementia is not: it is not contagious, not 'paagalpan', and not a normal, untreatable end to every old age. It is a medical condition with real causes — and that framing is what opens the door to help.
Understand why it happened, how we got here, and what might come next.
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If you've noticed changes in a parent, you are not helpless and you don't have to wait until things get bad. Steady, kind steps protect both their dignity and their safety — and make a doctor's visit far more useful.
See a doctor sooner if the confusion came on suddenly, follows a stroke or fall, comes with fever, or if there is any risk to safety — wandering, leaving the gas on, or unsafe driving.
Myth 1 — Memory loss is just normal old age, nothing to check.
Some slowing is normal. But forgetting that disrupts daily life — getting lost, repeating questions, struggling with money — is not normal ageing and deserves a check. Brushing it off as 'just age' is how reversible causes get missed.
Myth 2 — Dementia is 'paagalpan', a kind of madness.
It is not. Dementia is damage to brain cells and their connections, a medical condition like heart disease or diabetes. Calling it madness only adds shame and pushes families to hide it instead of getting help.
Myth 3 — All memory loss means Alzheimer's.
No. Alzheimer's is the most common cause, but vascular problems, B12 deficiency, thyroid trouble, depression and some medicines can all cause forgetfulness — and several of those are treatable. That is why an assessment matters.
Myth 4 — Nothing can be done, so why bother seeing a doctor.
There is no full cure for Alzheimer's yet, but 'nothing' is wrong. Reversible causes can be treated, routine and safety steps reduce suffering, some treatments may slow things, and support helps the whole family cope.
Myth 5 — If we name it, it gets worse.
A diagnosis changes nothing about the brain — it only lets you plan, treat what's treatable, keep the person safe, and arrange support early, while they can still take part in decisions.
There is no single blood test that says 'dementia'. Doctors put together a picture from your story, simple thinking tests, and checks to rule out treatable causes. Costs below are rough India ranges and vary widely by city, hospital and insurance.
The assessment
A few facts worth holding on to
Step back, and dementia is one of the most misunderstood and most stigmatised health stories in India — feared in silence, mistaken for madness, or shrugged off as 'just old age' until a family is overwhelmed. As people live longer, more families will meet it. What this story really shows is that fear and shame, not the condition alone, do much of the damage.
The deeper point is that naming it early changes the whole journey. A clear assessment can catch the reversible causes — B12, thyroid, depression — that are treated and reversed. Even when it is Alzheimer's, an early diagnosis lets a family plan finances, keep their loved one safe, set up routine and support, and let the person take part in their own decisions while they still can. That is agency, not surrender.
There is no full cure yet, and honesty matters here. But 'no cure' is not 'nothing to do'. The long-term impact of compassion is huge: a person treated with dignity, kept safe and connected, and surrounded by a supported family, lives better — and so do the people caring for them.
The lesson for any worried son or daughter is simple. Watch calmly, write down what you see, and ask a doctor — not out of panic, but out of love. The future of an ageing parent is shaped far less by one frightening word and far more by the steady, kind, informed choices a family makes after it.