Dementia senile confabular (DSF) is one of the clinical manifestations of Alzheimer's disease. Confabulation is the orphaning of associative thinking processes. With confabulation, the patient indicates false connections of what happened in his life, creating a different picture of the past. Each patient expresses the entire story of his life or his personality, violating its structure and absolute truth. Such people usually experience irritability, aggressiveness or helplessness. In severe cases, such patients become unable to work and require constant care.
As numerous scientific studies have shown, symptoms of dementia begin with a weakening of memory function. First, patients forget recent events from their past life, then it becomes difficult for them to cope with daily activities. The next stage is confusion, loss of orientation and inability to navigate space-time. These symptoms are already visible in older people, and they are affected several years earlier. Unfortunately, diagnosing dementia and other memory disorders can be difficult because
Dementia in the elderly and dementia mixed with senile dementia are slightly differentiated. Primary dementia corresponds to the dementia and idiocy worksheet for dementia of senile people. As dementia progresses, it can manifest itself in varying degrees of dementia. No specific diagnosis is needed for moderate to severe dementia.