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There’s hope for Lewy body dementia

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By Maureen Salamon
Posted on October 23, 2025

Months after actor and comedian Robin Williams took his own life in August 2014, autopsy results revealed he had a devastating disease: Lewy body dementia (LBD).

Unlike Alzheimer’s disease and even frontotemporal dementia, this brain disorder has tended to hide in the shadows. But work is underway to change that, said Dr. Stephen Gomperts, an assistant professor of neurology at Harvard Medical School and director of the Lewy Body Dementia Unit at Harvard-affiliated Massachusetts General Hospital.

Perhaps surprisingly, LBD is the second most common cause of neurodegenerative dementia after Alzheimer’s disease. How do its symptoms differ? Who is at risk? And how is it diagnosed and treated?

What is Lewy body dementia?

First, it’s important to know that there are two main types of this dementia. One is called dementia with Lewy bodies, or DLB. A second type, known as Parkinson’s disease dementia, or PDD, may arise late in the course of that illness.

These disorders stem from an abnormal buildup of protein deposits in the brain called Lewy bodies. The deposits, formed from a protein called alpha-synuclein, settle in brain areas affecting thinking, behavior, perception and movement.

Much like Alzheimer’s disease, LBD is progressive and ultimately fatal. But while the median lifespan of people who have this illness is seven years, there is a high degree of variation in the duration of disease, Gomperts said.

“Many people respond well to medicines that aim to improve their ability to function and quality of life.”

How common is it?

More than a million Americans live with Lewy body dementia. Others who likely have the disease may not have sought care or have been misdiagnosed, Gomperts said.

“In the past, LBD was often subsumed under the general umbrella of ‘dementia’ or ‘Alzheimer’s.’ It’s still significantly underdiagnosed, but that’s getting better.”

Most people with LBD develop symptoms after age 50, so the numbers are likely to grow as the population continues to age.

How is LBD similar to Alzheimer’s?

As with Alzheimer’s, LBD affects a person’s ability to think clearly, remember details, solve problems, focus on tasks and eventually to care for themselves.

“Gradually progressive trouble with thinking is the key shared feature between the two. This initially doesn’t impact activities of daily living, but ultimately it does,” Gomperts explained.

In Alzheimer’s disease, memory problems usually occur early and are the dominant problem.

In contrast, in LBD, difficulties with problem-solving or spatial problems tend to arise before memory difficulties.

But any of these symptoms can occur first or in combination, and they may fluctuate. Perception is often affected, which can manifest as visual hallucinations. Delusions (false beliefs) are also common as the disease progresses.

“Whereas hallucinations and delusions are common late in the course of Alzheimer’s disease, visual hallucinations often arise early in LBD. For example, a person with LBD might see people or animals that aren’t there,” he said. “Such hallucinations are only rarely perceived as threatening.”

Other differences are:

—Acting out dreams. People with LBD may act out their dreams. Known as REM sleep behavioral disorder, this problem often arises even before thinking problems start.

—Changes in movement. People with Lewy body dementia often move slowly and stiffly, developing tremors and gait changes and becoming prone to falls. When people have PDD, progressive movement problems arise early and are the rule. This symptom leads to the initial diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease. In DLB, movement is often but not always affected.

How do experts distinguish between them?

It’s all in the timing of key symptoms. A “one-year rule” distinguishes each disorder.

PDD: When someone diagnosed with Parkinson’s develops memory and thinking problems that impair activities of daily living more than a year after their movement problems arise, PDD is diagnosed.

DLB: When cognitive problems arise earlier, or come without movement problems, dementia with Lewy bodies is diagnosed.

Who is at risk for Lewy body dementia?

Age is considered the biggest risk factor for the disease. Most cases have no known trigger, although a handful of gene mutations can predispose someone to LBD.

People who have suffered head trauma appear to develop LBD and Parkinson’s more often. Both conditions also disproportionately affect men.

How is it diagnosed?

Doctors diagnose DLB when key clinical features are present — trouble thinking, fluctuations in thinking, movement problems and REM sleep behavioral disorder — in the absence of other causes. They diagnose PDD when dementia arises in Parkinson’s disease.

Diagnosing DLB is challenging because early symptoms are often confused with symptoms that arise in other brain or psychiatric disorders. Many people don’t receive an accurate diagnosis until their symptoms become more advanced.

Physicians deploy an array of tests and imaging exams to tease out LBD from other conditions that can trigger similar symptoms, such as Alzheimer’s disease, vascular disease, thyroid disorders or vitamin B-12 deficiency.

Are there treatments for LBD?

Yes. Although there’s no cure, treatments like medications, physical therapy and counseling can help with specific symptoms of LBD, such as thinking problems, hallucinations and sleep disturbances.

LBD-related movement symptoms can also be treated with some medications used for Parkinson’s. This makes it easier to walk and do other activities.

Maureen Salamon is executive editor of Harvard Women’s Health Watch. © 2025 Harvard University. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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