Evaluation for Dementia

Dementia and the loss of cognitive function can be a frightening part of the aging process for many. Memories can disappear, daily tasks become more difficult, and patients and their caregivers can often feel a sense of hopelessness about how to handle these life changes.

A neuropsychological evaluation is one of the first steps to determining a patient’s diagnosis and learning how to navigate this new chapter in their life.

dementia care2

What is a Neuropsychological Evaluation?

A neuropsychological evaluation is a comprehensive, one-on-one assessment of the brain’s capabilities. Using standardized tests and clinical interviews, we measure:

  • Memory (short-term, long-term, and learning efficiency)
  • Attention and processing speed
  • Executive functions (planning, organization, problem-solving)
  • Language (word finding, comprehension, fluency)
  • Visuospatial skills
  • Mood and behavioral health
  • Everyday functioning and safety

Because we compare results to age- and education-based norms, we can determine where performance is expected, borderline, or clearly impaired and how patterns map to specific neurocognitive diagnoses versus other causes.

Why Choose Neuropsycholgical Testing at Neural Effects

Availability. We get you on the schedule within weeks, not months. Other clinics may make you wait 6 months or more to be tested as they work through a backlog of patients of many different age groups and conditions. Don’t wait 6 months for a test and 6 more to see a neurologist. Taking action means starting with us.

Clear answers. We translate data into plain-language conclusions and practical recommendations for care.

Differential diagnosis. We identify patterns that help distinguish among Alzheimer’s disease, vascular cognitive impairment, Lewy body disease, frontotemporal dementia, and cognitive changes related to sleep, mood, medications, pain, or traumatic brain injury.

Actionable next steps. We provide you a written plan tailored to safety, independence, medical follow-up, and caregiver support.

Who Should Consider an Evaluation?

Consider a consultation to see if testing is right for you if:

  • You have noticed new or worsening memory loss, word-finding problems, or confusion
  • Increasing difficulty managing medications, finances, appointments, or driving
  • Noticing changes in personality, behavior, sleep, or visual hallucinations
  • Family history of dementia and new concerns about thinking
  • Medical factors that can affect cognition (e.g., stroke/TIA, Parkinson’s, sleep apnea, depression/anxiety, head injury)
Still not sure if consultation is right for you?

Evidence shows that earlier evaluation and risk management can meaningfully lower your lifetime dementia risk, especially when it targets hearing, vascular health, head‑injury prevention, sleep, and other modifiable factors.

Report of Findings

Evaluation results will include:
  • Diagnosis or diagnostic impression (when appropriate)
  • Cognitive strengths and weaknesses with percentile ranks
  • Safety considerations (driving, finances, medications, home)
  • Personalized recommendations for medical follow-up, therapies, daily routines, and caregiver resources
  • A baseline for future comparison
doctor and patient having a meeting in the doctor's office

Ongoing Monitoring with Yearly Retesting

Dementia and cognitive changes evolve over time. Establishing a baseline now allows us to track meaningful change and adjust care.

  • Annual check-ins: We recommend yearly re-evaluation (or sooner if there’s a notable change) to monitor progression, treatment response, and safety.
  • Compare-to-self: Follow-up testing uses the same or equivalent measures so we can sensitively detect changes in memory, attention, language, and executive skills.
  • Care plan updates: After each re-evaluation, you’ll receive updated recommendations for medications to discuss with your physician, driving/finances guidance, home supports, and community resources.
  • Support for families: Regular monitoring helps caregivers plan, access benefits, and communicate clearly with the medical team.

Note: If you recently started or adjusted medications, or had a health event (e.g., hospitalization, stroke, major surgery), consider retesting in 3–6 months to document impact and recovery.

Frequently Asked Questions

Take the Next Step. Early clarity leads to better planning and support.