Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is a group of brain disorders that affect the frontal and temporal lobes, the areas that help govern personality, behavior, and language. It is less common than Alzheimer’s disease, but it often appears earlier, with many cases diagnosed between ages 45 and 65.
FTD causes brain shrinking, called atrophy, especially in the frontal and temporal lobes.
The shrinkage is often visible on MRI or other brain scans, and studies show the frontal lobes are commonly affected first, with anterior temporal and sometimes thalamic and brainstem involvement as the disease progresses. The amount and pattern of atrophy depend on the FTD subtype, which is why some people show more behavior changes while others show more language problems.
In practical terms, FTD is not just “memory loss”; it is a progressive loss of brain tissue that tends to worsen over time and is tied to changes in judgment, behavior, language, and eventually more global disability.
FTD usually begins with changes in behavior or speech rather than memory loss. In the behavioral form, a person may become impulsive, socially inappropriate, emotionally flat, or less able to plan and organize daily life. They may also lose empathy, show obsessive routines, or develop unusual eating habits such as overeating sweets or carbohydrates. In language-led forms, speech may become slow, labored, or hard to understand, and a person may struggle to find words or use them correctly.
As FTD progresses, symptoms become more widespread and can affect movement, swallowing, and independence. Many people eventually need help with finances, safety, and everyday decisions because the condition weakens judgment and executive function. Memory problems often appear later, which is one reason FTD can be mistaken at first for a psychiatric illness or another type of dementia.
Dangers
FTD can create dangerous decision-making, especially in the behavioral variant, because it damages judgment, impulse control, and awareness of consequences.
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People may take unsafe risks, ignore rules, spend money recklessly, or act in socially inappropriate ways without realizing the danger.
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A major problem is loss of insight: they may not recognize their own impairment, so they keep making choices that put themselves or others at risk.
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Studies and specialty centers note increased risk of financial exploitation, aggression, and conflict with others as decision-making declines.
Why it happens
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FTD affects the frontal networks that normally weigh risk, emotion, and future consequences, so choices become more impulsive and less grounded in “what could happen next.
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Even when memory and basic test scores look fairly normal, early FTD patients can still have severe real-world judgment problems
What to watch for
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Unusual spending, scams, or giving away money.
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Falling for high-risk ideas or people.
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Acting without concern for consequences, despite warnings from family. advisors, and clinicians.
Practical response
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In many cases, the issue is not willful misbehavior but a brain-based loss of judgment, so safety planning matters more than trying to reason someone out of it.
There is no cure yet, so treatment focuses on symptom management and support. Doctors may use medications for mood or behavior, speech therapy for language problems, and caregiver education to reduce stress and improve safety. Brain imaging with an MRI, neurological exams, and detailed cognitive testing help confirm the diagnosis and rule out other causes.
FTD can be deeply disruptive, but early recognition matters. A timely diagnosis helps families plan, reduce risk, and match care to the person’s specific symptoms.
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