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Losing Your Sense of Smell Can Be A Sign of Dementia

Losing Your Sense of Smell Can Be A Sign of Dementia

As you get older, your senses tend to dull in different degrees. Most people think hearing and sight are the first to go. You don’t think much about your sense of smell. A new scientific study has shown that losing your sense of smell could be a sign of dementia.

Losing Your Sense of Smell Can Be A Sign of Dementia

The Study of Smelling

 

The team is part of the National Institute on Aging’s Health ABC study. They looked at smell tests that were done by over 2,200 people between the ages of 71 and 82. The tests were done in 1999 and 2000.

The participants smelled 12 different scents that are familiar from everyday life. Then they had to pick from a list of four options.

They were then graded as having good, moderate, or poor smelling functions.

The health of the participants was followed up on for 13 years, including annual phone surveys.

Losing Your Sense of Smell Can Be A Sign of Dementia

 

After considering other health factors like age and smoking, the team of researchers found that seniors with a bad sense of smell had a 46% higher chance of dying a decade earlier than those with a good sense of smell.

Sense of smell seems to be a good predictor of death for healthy people at the start of the study. Those who had a bad sniff score but were in okay shape had a 62% higher chance of dying in ten years than people with a good sniff score.

One thousand two hundred eleven participants who died by year 13 of the study, around 28% of the increased risk people had dementia, Parkinson’s disease, and maybe even cardiovascular disease. Lung disease or cancer didn’t seem to be linked to the sense of smell.

Some people are wondering if doctors can use a sniff test to diagnose dementia. The area of the brain that deals with smells is usually the first part of the brain to get damaged by Alzheimer’s and other brain diseases.

Read more here.

Problems with Detecting Sarcasm Could be a Sign of Dementia

Problems with Detecting Sarcasm Could be a Sign of Dementia

Are you a sarcastic person? Have you ever been sarcastic and someone took you seriously? There’s a study out that says that having problems with detecting sarcasm could be a sign of dementia.

Problems with Detecting Sarcasm Could be a Sign of Dementia

Problems with Detecting Sarcasm Could be a Sign of Dementia

 

Of course, the study doesn’t mean once or twice. If someone who is older is consistently missing cues that sarcasm being used, then it’s an issue.

The study, done by University of California, had 90 participants, 77 who had some form of cognitive impairment and 13 healthy controls. The participants took part in Social Inference, a subtest of The Awareness of Social Inference Test. This is a test to see how they handle and respond to a social interaction with one person using sincerity and sarcasm to communicate.

To do this they watched a video with actors and then took a yes or no quiz. Not only were words a key focus but so was body language, the actor who is being sarcastic would use exaggerated movements to show sarcasm.

The Results

 

The results of the test showed that everyone in the group could recognize sincerity very easily. As for the sarcasm scores, they were vastly different across the cognitive impaired participants.

Though participants with Semantic Dementia did the worst. Semantic Dementia has to do with the memories and world knowledge you obtained growing up. You lose more of the general knowledge verses specific periods of time.

So the participants who have Semantic Dementia may have lost the ability to recognize sarcasm. Overall participants with different forms of dementia failed the test. Though they did do better at recognizing sincerity.

This is something important to remember when interacting with loved ones with dementia. They may take your sarcasm seriously and they may get hurt feelings.

You can read the whole study here.