Older woman gazing thoughtfully by window indoors

Dementia and family history — what the genetic risk actually looks like

Sometimes it does, but not always. Some types of dementia have a stronger genetic link than others, and having a family member with dementia can raise risk in some cases. That does not mean the condition is certain to develop. Age, health, lifestyle, and other medical factors also matter. For many people, family history is only one part of the picture. If there is a strong pattern of early dementia in a family, medical advice may be useful.

Frequently Asked Questions Related to Diagnosis

Diagnosed in your 80s: what the prognosis actually looks like and why the range is so wide

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Life expectancy with dementia — why there's no useful average, and what to ask instead

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Dementia medication: what it can do, what it can't, and why the answer depends on the diagnosis

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The fears that come with dementia — and why the dark is harder than the day

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Does your parent know what's happening to them? The answer changes at every stage

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You can't guarantee prevention. But these habits meaningfully lower the risk

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The steps that genuinely reduce dementia risk — and the ones that don't do as much as claimed

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There is no cure for dementia. Here's what treatment can — and honestly can't — do

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