Who Should Undergo Diagnostics and When to Seek Them
If you notice changes in your thinking abilities or those of someone close to you, it’s important to know when to seek medical advice. Vascular dementia develops when blood flow to the brain becomes reduced or blocked, damaging brain tissue over time. Because early detection can make a significant difference in managing the condition, recognizing warning signs is crucial.[1]
You should consider seeing a doctor if you experience slowness of thought, difficulty with planning and understanding, problems with concentration, or changes to mood and personality. Other concerning signs include feeling disoriented and confused, difficulty walking and keeping balance, or symptoms similar to Alzheimer’s disease such as memory and language problems. These difficulties can make daily activities increasingly challenging.[5]
People over 65 years of age should be especially attentive to early symptoms of dementia. If you’re worried about someone else, encourage them to make an appointment with their doctor and perhaps suggest that you accompany them. Having support during this process can make it less overwhelming for everyone involved.[5]
Anyone who has had a stroke should also be monitored for thinking and memory changes, as vascular dementia can develop after a stroke blocks major blood vessels in the brain. However, not every stroke leads to vascular dementia. Whether thinking abilities are affected depends on the stroke’s severity and location in the brain.[1]
People with certain risk factors should be particularly vigilant about getting tested. Those with high blood pressure, heart disease, diabetes, high cholesterol, or a history of strokes are at increased risk. Lifestyle factors such as smoking, being overweight, or leading a physically inactive life also elevate the chances of developing vascular dementia.[2]
Diagnostic Methods
When you visit your doctor with concerns about memory or thinking problems, they will conduct several types of examinations to determine whether vascular dementia is present and to rule out other conditions. There is no single test that can definitively diagnose vascular dementia, so doctors rely on a combination of assessments to build a complete picture.[5]
Assessment of Symptoms
Your doctor will begin by carefully evaluating your symptoms to determine whether they match the typical pattern of vascular dementia. This involves detailed conversations about the difficulties you’ve been experiencing. The doctor will ask about when symptoms started, whether they appeared suddenly or gradually, and how they’ve changed over time. Understanding the timeline of symptom development helps distinguish vascular dementia from other types of dementia, such as Alzheimer’s disease.[7]
The assessment also explores how symptoms affect your daily life. Your doctor may ask about your ability to perform routine tasks, follow instructions, or manage activities that used to be easy, such as paying bills or cooking meals. Changes in personality, behavior, and mood are also important indicators that help form an accurate diagnosis.[7]
Medical History Review
A thorough medical history is essential for diagnosing vascular dementia. Your doctor will ask detailed questions about your health background, particularly focusing on conditions related to vascular problems. This includes asking about any history of strokes, even small ones that may not have caused noticeable symptoms, as well as high blood pressure, heart disease, diabetes, and high cholesterol.[5]
Understanding your risk factors helps the doctor piece together whether reduced blood flow to the brain might be causing your symptoms. The medical history also helps identify other potential causes of cognitive problems, ensuring that nothing is overlooked in the diagnostic process.[7]
Assessment of Mental Abilities
Doctors use specific tests to measure changes in thinking and memory. These assessments typically involve several tasks and questions designed to evaluate different aspects of cognitive function. You might be asked to remember lists of words, solve problems, follow instructions, or complete tasks that test your reasoning and planning abilities.[5]
Memory or cognitive tests help determine the severity of thinking difficulties and which mental abilities are most affected. The term cognitive refers to mental processes like thinking, learning, and remembering. These evaluations provide objective measurements that can be tracked over time to monitor whether the condition is stable, improving, or worsening.[7]
Brain Imaging
Brain scans play a crucial role in diagnosing vascular dementia because they can reveal changes and damage in the brain caused by reduced blood flow. People with vascular dementia almost always have visible abnormalities on brain imaging scans. These abnormalities can include evidence of prior strokes, diseased small blood vessels, and changes in the brain’s white matter, which are the connecting pathways that relay messages between different brain regions.[2]
Magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI, is generally the preferred imaging test for diagnosing vascular dementia. An MRI scan uses powerful magnets and radio waves to create detailed images of the brain’s soft tissues. This type of scan can detect even small strokes that may have occurred without obvious symptoms, as well as damage to blood vessels and changes in white matter. The detailed pictures help doctors see the extent and location of brain damage.[11]
A computed tomography scan, or CT scan, may also be used. This imaging test uses X-rays to create cross-sectional images of the brain. While not as detailed as MRI for viewing soft tissue, CT scans can still identify strokes, blood vessel problems, and other brain changes that might be causing dementia symptoms. CT scans are often more readily available and faster to perform than MRI scans.[5]
Brain imaging helps doctors distinguish vascular dementia from other types of dementia and identify the specific areas of the brain that have been damaged. This information guides treatment decisions and helps predict how symptoms might progress.[11]
Laboratory Tests
Blood tests provide important information about the health of your heart and blood vessels, which directly affects brain function. These laboratory tests can measure cholesterol levels, blood sugar levels, and other compounds in the blood. They help identify underlying conditions that may be contributing to vascular problems.[11]
Doctors use blood tests to check for thyroid problems, vitamin deficiencies such as vitamin D or vitamin B12, and signs of infection. Any of these issues could cause symptoms similar to dementia, so ruling them out is an essential part of the diagnostic process. Laboratory tests also help detect conditions like diabetes that increase the risk of vascular dementia and need to be managed.[11]
Neurological Examination
A neurological examination assesses how well your nervous system is functioning. The term neurological refers to the brain, spinal cord, and nerves throughout the body. During this examination, your doctor will test various aspects of your physical health that can be affected by brain damage.[11]
The doctor will check your reflexes, muscle tone and strength, and compare strength on both sides of your body. They’ll evaluate your sense of touch and sight, test your coordination and balance, and observe how you walk across the room. These physical assessments can reveal problems caused by strokes or reduced blood flow to specific parts of the brain.[11]
Diagnostics for Clinical Trial Qualification
When researchers conduct clinical trials to test new treatments for vascular dementia, they need to ensure that participants truly have the condition and meet specific criteria. The diagnostic tests used for clinical trial enrollment are often more detailed and standardized than those used in routine medical practice.[12]
Clinical trials typically require brain imaging studies, most commonly MRI scans, to confirm the presence of vascular brain changes. These scans must show clear evidence of strokes, small vessel disease, or white matter changes that are consistent with vascular dementia. The imaging results help researchers ensure that participants have the specific type of brain damage the trial is designed to address.[2]
Cognitive testing in clinical trials is usually more extensive and uses validated assessment tools that can measure even small changes in thinking abilities. Researchers need baseline measurements of cognitive function so they can track whether an experimental treatment produces improvements. These tests must be administered in a standardized way to ensure that results can be compared across different participants and study sites.[12]
A comprehensive medical history is required to determine whether potential participants have conditions that might interfere with the study. Researchers need to know about all medications being taken, other health problems, and the history of strokes or vascular disease. Some trials may exclude people with certain conditions to ensure the safety of participants and the validity of results.[11]
Laboratory tests in clinical trials often go beyond basic blood work. Researchers may measure specific biomarkers, which are biological indicators of disease, to better understand each participant’s condition and monitor changes during the study. These tests might look at markers of inflammation, blood clotting, or vascular health that aren’t typically checked in routine care.[11]
Participants in clinical trials usually need to undergo these diagnostic tests at multiple time points throughout the study. Initial tests establish whether someone qualifies to participate, baseline tests are performed before treatment begins, and follow-up tests track changes over time. This rigorous testing schedule ensures that researchers can accurately measure whether a new treatment is working and whether it causes any unexpected effects.[12]



