Aging Well: News & Insights for Seniors and Caregivers
- Vascular dementia stems from reduced brain blood flow after strokes or small vessel disease; Alzheimer's disease involves amyloid plaques and tau tangles.
- Vascular dementia often progresses in steps after vascular events; Alzheimer's disease causes gradual, continuous cognitive decline.
- Memory loss typically appears first in Alzheimer's disease; Vascular dementia more often starts with slowed thinking and executive dysfunction.
- Diagnosis uses cognitive testing and imaging: MRI reveals vascular damage; biomarkers and amyloid PET or CSF support Alzheimer's disease diagnosis.
- Treatment differs: vascular care prioritizes cardiovascular risk management; Alzheimer's disease has symptomatic medications; mixed dementia may need both approaches.
Last updated: June 2026
When a loved one begins showing signs of memory loss or cognitive change, one of the most common questions families face is which type of dementia they may be dealing with. Vascular dementia and Alzheimer’s disease are the two most common forms of dementia, and they share enough symptoms to be frequently confused with one another.
Understanding the differences matters. The two conditions have distinct causes, follow different patterns of decline, and call for different treatment priorities. Knowing which condition your loved one has shapes every decision that follows, from medical management to care planning.
Our Promise is to love and care for your family as we do our own.
Quick Answer
Vascular dementia is caused by reduced blood flow to the brain, most often following strokes or small vessel disease, and typically progresses in a stepwise pattern. Alzheimer’s disease is caused by the accumulation of amyloid plaques and tau tangles and follows a more gradual, continuous decline. Memory loss tends to be the first prominent symptom of Alzheimer’s, while vascular dementia more often begins with slowed thinking and executive function difficulties. Many aging adults have both conditions simultaneously, which is known as mixed dementia.
Two Different Conditions With Overlapping Symptoms
Vascular dementia and Alzheimer’s disease both cause cognitive decline but do so through entirely different mechanisms. The table below provides a side-by-side comparison of the key features.
| Feature | Vascular Dementia | Alzheimer’s Disease |
| Primary Cause | Reduced blood flow to the brain | Amyloid plaques and tau tangles |
| Onset | Often sudden or stepwise | Gradual |
| Pattern Of Decline | Stepwise, with periods of stability | Continuous and progressive |
| First Prominent Symptoms | Slowed thinking, executive function, gait | Memory loss, language difficulties |
| Cardiovascular Link | Direct | Indirect association |
| Primary Treatment Focus | Cardiovascular risk management | Symptomatic medications |
What Causes Vascular Dementia
Vascular dementia occurs when blood flow to the brain is reduced or blocked, most often as a result of stroke, a series of TIAs, or chronic small vessel disease caused by long-term high blood pressure. Brain cells deprived of oxygen die, and the cognitive changes that follow depend on which areas of the brain are affected.
What Causes Alzheimer’s Disease
Alzheimer’s disease is caused by the accumulation of abnormal proteins in the brain.
Amyloid plaques build up between nerve cells and tau tangles form inside them, disrupting communication and eventually causing cell death. Unlike vascular dementia, it cannot be attributed to a specific cardiovascular event.
How The Symptoms Compare
The overlap in symptoms between vascular dementia and Alzheimer’s disease is significant, which is why diagnosis requires careful evaluation rather than observation alone.
What Appears First
Memory loss is typically the earliest and most prominent symptom of Alzheimer’s disease. Families often notice a loved one repeatedly asking the same questions or losing track of recent events before other changes appear.
In vascular dementia, the first symptoms more commonly affect thinking speed and executive function. A loved one may struggle with planning, decision-making, or following multi-step instructions before memory loss becomes prominent.
How Behavioral And Physical Symptoms Differ
Both conditions can cause mood changes, personality shifts, and confusion. Gait changes, difficulty walking, and urinary symptoms appear earlier and more frequently in vascular dementia, however, than in Alzheimer’s disease.
Alzheimer’s disease more commonly produces pronounced language difficulties and spatial disorientation in the middle stages.
How Each Condition Progresses
Vascular Dementia: Stepwise Decline
Vascular dementia progresses in steps. A noticeable change follows a stroke or vascular event, then a period of relative stability, then another change following the next event. This means progression is directly influenced by whether additional vascular events occur, giving cardiovascular management a meaningful impact on the trajectory.
Alzheimer’s Disease: Gradual Continuous Decline
Alzheimer’s disease follows a more continuous, predictable decline across early, middle, and later stages.
While pace varies between individuals, the overall trajectory is consistently downward over time. Newer therapies targeting amyloid accumulation are showing early promise but have not yet changed the fundamental course of the disease.
Diagnosis And Treatment: Key Distinctions
How Each Condition Is Diagnosed
Both conditions are diagnosed through cognitive assessments, neurological examination, and brain imaging. MRI is particularly important for vascular dementia because it can reveal strokes, white matter changes, and vascular damage that confirm the diagnosis.
Alzheimer’s disease is increasingly diagnosed through biomarkers including cerebrospinal fluid testing and amyloid PET scans, in addition to clinical assessment.
How Treatment Approaches Differ
Vascular dementia has no FDA-approved treatment. The primary focus is preventing additional strokes through cardiovascular risk management, including blood pressure, cholesterol, and diabetes control.
Alzheimer’s disease has several approved medications including cholinesterase inhibitors and memantine. When mixed dementia is present, elements of both approaches may be relevant.
What Is Mixed Dementia?
Mixed dementia occurs when an individual has both vascular changes and Alzheimer’s-type pathology in the brain simultaneously. It is more common than many families realize, particularly in adults over the age of 80.
In mixed dementia, managing cardiovascular risk factors remains important alongside any Alzheimer’s-specific treatment, as both pathologies contribute to cognitive decline.
Memory Care At The Kensington Falls Church
Whether your loved one has vascular dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, or a combination of both, The Kensington Falls Church provides memory care designed to meet each resident’s specific needs and current stage.
The Kensington Club supports residents experiencing early cognitive changes. Connections serves those in the middle stages of memory loss. Haven provides compassionate, comfort-focused care for those in the later stages. Our team members are trained to support residents across the full spectrum of dementia diagnosis, with individualized care plans that reflect each person’s history and preferences.
Our Promise is to love and care for your family as we do our own.
Learn how our memory care programs can support your loved one and your family.
Contact The Kensington Falls Church today
FAQs About Vascular Dementia Vs. Alzheimer’s Disease
Vascular dementia is caused by reduced blood flow to the brain from strokes or small vessel disease and progresses in a stepwise pattern. Alzheimer’s disease is caused by amyloid plaques and tau tangles and follows a gradual, continuous decline. Memory loss is typically the first prominent symptom of Alzheimer’s, while vascular dementia more often begins with slowed thinking and executive function difficulties.
Yes. Mixed dementia, involving both vascular damage and Alzheimer’s-type changes in the brain, is common particularly in adults over 80. Managing cardiovascular risk factors remains important in mixed dementia alongside any Alzheimer’s-specific treatment. A diagnosis of both conditions does not necessarily mean faster decline than either condition alone.
Vascular dementia has no FDA-approved treatment; the focus is on preventing additional strokes through cardiovascular risk management. Alzheimer’s disease has approved symptomatic medications and emerging disease-modifying therapies targeting amyloid accumulation. When mixed dementia is present, both treatment approaches may be applied by the care team.
Both vascular dementia and Alzheimer’s disease benefit from specialized memory care that provides structure, safety, trained team members, and meaningful daily engagement. Care plans should be individualized to reflect each person’s specific symptoms, stage, and diagnosis. The Kensington Falls Church supports residents with vascular dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, and mixed dementia through its full memory care continuum.
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