Frontal Lobe Dementia Gambling
Q: My aunt, has within the last 6 years become addicted to scratch off tickets at any local gas station. I worry about her safety. She lives alone (insists on it) and comes and goes as she pleases. She states that this gambling is her social life. She knows all the other gamblers that hang out in the same places. Anyway, she does has a bowel and incontinence problem which we have just recently gone for an MRI because of that. We will have some results tomorrow. She has no interest in doing anything else. Whatever we suggest she says she doesn’t feel like. She will not go to therapy or church. However, she does read. Do I just let her be? Any suggestions would be well received.
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– Jane
An initial neuropsychological evaluation showed selective impairment on the Iowa Gambling Task similar to that of patients with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia, despite normal. Frontotemporal dementia (FTD), a common cause of dementia, is a group of disorders that occur when nerve cells in the frontal and temporal lobes of the brain are lost. This causes the lobes to shrink. FTD can affect behavior, personality, language, and movement.
Frontotemporal Dementia Can Cause Gambling Compulsions
Hi Jane,
It sounds like a pretty tough situation with your mother. I think the course of action will depend on your mother’s test results and consultation with her physician.
There is one type of dementia in particular that will sometimes manifest itself as a gambling compulsion and that is called “frontotemporal dementia” or sometimes “frontal lobe dementia”. This is dementia that affects the frontal lobe of the brain, which is responsible for many of our inhibitions.
Frontotemporal dementia is sometimes called frontal lobe dementia. It used to be known as Pick’s disease, after Arnold Pick the physician who discovered it. What are the symptoms of frontotemporal. Frontotemporal dementia (FTD), is a progressive dementing condition characterized by selective degeneration of the frontal and anterior temporal lobes that causes a profound alteration in character and social conduct, in the context of relative preservation of perception, spatial skills, praxis, and memory.
People who experience damage to this part of their brain from dementia or some other cause will often have personality changes and will sometimes develop gambling problems
For example, a study (only the abstract is available) talks about “frontotemporal dementia presenting as pathological gambling“.
Another article from this year has more info on that connection.
I don’t mean to “diagnose” your mother from afar, but this is the first think I thought of when you wrote and may be something to discuss with your mother’s physician if she or her hasn’t already brought up the possibility.
I know it can be difficult, but this is the type of situation where you may need to consider guardianship and power-of-attorney. Obviously that’s something you’d want to talk about with her physician and ideally, family members or other trusted advisors, but it may be worth exploring for your aunt’s sake.
Best wishes,
Frontal Lobe Dementia Gambling Addiction
AssistedLiving.com Team