RELATED: If You Notice This When Cooking, It May Be an Early Dementia Sign, Doctors Say. We all slip up sometimes when trying to remember the right word for something. But Maree Farrow, PhD, a cognitive neuroscientist with the University of Tasmania’s Wicking Dementia Research and Education Centre, told Australia’s ABC News that people with dementia end up repeatedly having difficulty finding the right word to use. Instead, they often end up substituting the wrong word for things, whether knowingly or without even realizing it. “They’re not so much making it up, it’s just that when they’re trying to retrieve the word, the wrong word comes out,” Farrow said. For example, she said that people with dementia might mean to say something like “get the potatoes,” but then end up saying “get the apples.” With some types of dementia, language problems may be one of the first noticeable symptoms. Two major forms of dementia, frontotemporal dementia (FTD) and Alzheimer’s disease, can cause language impairment in the form of primary progressive aphasia (PPA). PPA occurs when there is damage to the temporal lobes, per the Alzheimer’s Society. And this can affect language because a “key function of the left temporal lobe is to store the meanings of words and the names of objects,” the Alzheimer’s Society explains. The organization says difficulties with language—like substituting the wrong word—will be the first noticeable symptom for a person with PPA. According to Northwestern Medicine, 3o to 40 percent of people who have PPA get it from Alzheimer’s disease, while 60 to 70 percent of PPA cases are the result of FTD. RELATED: For more health content delivered straight to your inbox, sign up for our daily newsletter. Sometimes having trouble finding the right word to use is a normal age-related memory change, according to the Alzheimer’s Association. But if you’re dealing with some form of dementia, you’ll likely experience other language problems, too. The Alzheimer’s Society says people with dementia may not only have difficulty finding the right words to use, but also use words that have no meaning or are jumbled up in the wrong order. And if a person speaks a second language, they may forget it and go back to speaking the first language they learned as a child. “There may eventually come a time when the person can no longer communicate as they once did,” the organization explains. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reports that there were at least 5 million adults 65 years or older diagnosed with dementia by 2014. That number is expected to rise to 14 million by 2060. Alzheimer’s disease is the most common form of dementia among U.S. adults, with the CDC reporting that around 6.2 million people in the country are estimated to be living with Alzheimer’s disease in 2021. FTD, on the other hand, is the most common form of dementia for people under 60, and it affects nearly 60,000 people each year, per the Association for Frontotemporal Degeneration.ae0fcc31ae342fd3a1346ebb1f342fcb RELATED: 91 Percent of Older Adults With Dementia Have This in Common, Research Says.