
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is a type of dementia caused by degeneration in the temporal and frontal lobes of the brain. Our guest discusses the symptoms, risk factors, prevalence, and course of the disease, along with information on how a doctor diagnoses FTD and what families and caregivers can do after diagnosis. Guest: Howard “Howie” Rosen, MD, behavioral neurologist at the University of California San Francisco Memory and Aging Center
Episode Topics:
A definition of Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD) 1:02
How common is FTD? 3:53
Genetic risk factors of FTD: 4:30
Non-genetic risk factors of FTD: 6:40
Symptoms of FTD: 8:40
How a clinician diagnoses FTD: 14:03
What is the course of the disease? 16:20
What to do after a diagnosis: 18:51
Family and caregiver experience of FTD: 22:36
Community support and networking: 25:53
By Wisconsin Alzheimer‘s Disease Research Center4.6
134134 ratings
Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is a type of dementia caused by degeneration in the temporal and frontal lobes of the brain. Our guest discusses the symptoms, risk factors, prevalence, and course of the disease, along with information on how a doctor diagnoses FTD and what families and caregivers can do after diagnosis. Guest: Howard “Howie” Rosen, MD, behavioral neurologist at the University of California San Francisco Memory and Aging Center
Episode Topics:
A definition of Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD) 1:02
How common is FTD? 3:53
Genetic risk factors of FTD: 4:30
Non-genetic risk factors of FTD: 6:40
Symptoms of FTD: 8:40
How a clinician diagnoses FTD: 14:03
What is the course of the disease? 16:20
What to do after a diagnosis: 18:51
Family and caregiver experience of FTD: 22:36
Community support and networking: 25:53

43,628 Listeners

14,551 Listeners

3,340 Listeners

2,057 Listeners

10,366 Listeners

1,487 Listeners

6,481 Listeners

12,783 Listeners

342 Listeners

695 Listeners

306 Listeners

263 Listeners

389 Listeners

8,225 Listeners

6,403 Listeners