Recognizing the Signs of Mild Cognitive Impairment Due to Early Alzheimer’s Disease
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Understanding Mild Cognitive Impairment Symptoms
Understanding Mild Cognitive Impairment Symptoms

Treating Someone Who Has Cognitive Impairment With Dignity

Coming to Terms With an Early-Stage Alzheimer’s Diagnosis

Giving Yourself Grace as an Alzheimer’s Caregiver

Recruiting a Care Partner for Early Alzheimer's

Almost everyone can relate to misplacing their car keys or forgetting the name of an actor. It’s a type of memory lapse that’s not unusual and can become even more common with age.
In other cases, though, these incidents can be a sign of mild cognitive impairment (MCI), which can develop into Alzheimer’s disease or another type of dementia.
“As we get older, our bodies and our brains age,” says Monica Moreno, senior director of care and support at the Alzheimer’s Association. That’s why it can be easy to regard problems with memory or reasoning as a normal part of aging. “But there are some symptoms or warning signs that may indicate something more serious is going on,” she says.
MCI and Alzheimer’s: What’s Happening in the Brain
Mild cognitive impairment is characterized by the wearing down of the myelin sheaths that surround neurons — nerve cells that are responsible for sending and receiving messages between the brain and other areas of the body.
Early Signs of MCI Due to Alzheimer’s
People with Alzheimer’s disease will often experience more severe memory loss than people who are aging normally. This degree of memory loss leaves them “amnestic,” or unable to remember new information. They typically repeat, ask questions over and over, and rapidly forget what was said between questions.
Among the signs of Alzheimer’s are:
Memory Loss That Interferes With Normal Functioning
One of the most common (and earliest) signs of Alzheimer’s disease is an inability to remember information, particularly new information. Over time, this memory loss can start to take a toll on daily life.
A person in the early stages of Alzheimer’s may forget to go to appointments, take medications, or pay bills or not remember how to get to a familiar location. They may forget what they need at home and buy the wrong things. They may make errors driving or get lost.
Difficulty Doing Familiar Tasks
When Moreno asks people with Alzheimer’s what prompted them to see a doctor, they often say they’ve been having trouble doing activities that they did their whole life. “Tasks that had been so normal and easy for them were now becoming more and more difficult,” she says.
For example, “I met a woman who was a vice president of a bank, and one day she was trying to help her grandsons with their homework, and she couldn’t do a simple math problem,” says Moreno. “Then there was an award-winning chef who suddenly forgot how to make an omelet one morning.” In each case, tasks that had been easy for that particular person had suddenly become impossible.
Trouble Speaking or Finding the Right Words
Dr. Leavitt says that along with memory loss, people with mild cognitive impairment typically have trouble with language. “It comes across as, ‘I can’t get the words out,’ or ‘Her name is on the tip of my tongue,’” she says. “It’s something that’s very common, but [in people with Alzheimer’s], it’s more severe.”
People with mild cognitive impairment due to Alzheimer’s may also have trouble keeping up a conversation. They may stop in the middle of a sentence and lose their train of thought, for example, or repeat themselves. They can also have trouble retrieving words from their brain’s storehouse of information, which is known as “lexical access.”
“Think of your brain as a big warehouse,” says Leavitt. “You’ve got all these little forklifts, and you send them off to aisle 9, row 47. That requires coordination among areas of your brain to go to the right place, grab the information, and bring it out. … When it falls apart a little bit, that’s normal, healthy aging. But when that starts to fall apart a lot, that tends to be a signifier of Alzheimer’s.”
When to See a Doctor
Moreno encourages people to see a doctor if they (or a loved one) notice even one of the symptoms of mild cognitive impairment or Alzheimer’s. “You shouldn’t wait to experience all the signs,” she says.
A general doctor, neurologist, geriatrician, or psychiatrist can perform tests to evaluate cognitive functioning. The ones that are most often used include:
- Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), which involves memorizing a short list of words, naming certain objects, and copying shapes
- Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE), which requires counting backward, identifying objects, and stating other facts, such as the date
- Mini-Cog Screening, which involves memorizing and recalling words and drawing a picture of a clock with the hands pointing to a specific time
“It can be hard to face the reality of decline that [you or] a loved one is experiencing, [but] you have to put safety above everything else,” says Leavitt.
- How Memory and Thinking Ability Change With Age. Harvard Health Publishing. August 30, 2017.
- Memory Problems, Forgetfulness, and Aging. National Institute on Aging. November 22, 2023.
- Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI). Alzheimer’s Association.
- What Happens to the Brain in Alzheimer’s Disease? National Institute on Aging. January 19, 2024.
- 10 Early Signs and Symptoms of Alzheimer’s and Dementia. Alzheimer’s Association.
- Cognitive Test. Cleveland Clinic. January 14, 2025.
- How Is Alzheimer’s Disease Diagnosed? National Institute on Aging. December 8, 2022.
- Earlier Diagnosis. Alzheimer’s Association.

Jessica Baity, MD
Medical Reviewer
Jessica Baity, MD, is a board-certified neurologist practicing in southern Louisiana. She cares for a variety of patients in all fields of neurology, including epilepsy, headache, ...

Maria Masters
Author
Maria Masters is a contributing editor and writer for Everyday Health and What to Expect, and she has held positions at Men's Health and Family Circle. Her work has appeared in Hea...