Alzheimer’s vs Parkinson’s: 7 Critical Differences Families Must Know

Alzheimer's vs. Parkinson's

Alzheimer’s vs Parkinson’s—it’s a question many families ask when a loved one begins showing concerning symptoms. These two conditions are the most common neurodegenerative diseases affecting older adults in the United States, together impacting nearly 8 million Americans. That number is expected to double by 2050.

Because both conditions affect the brain and can cause cognitive changes, they’re easy to confuse. But understanding the differences between Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s is crucial—especially when early symptoms could point to either condition.

This guide breaks down the 7 key differences between Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease, including their causes, symptoms, and the latest treatments, so you can better understand what your family may be facing and what care options are available.


Alzheimer’s Disease: The Basics

Alzheimer’s disease is a progressive brain disorder that destroys memory and cognitive function. It causes 60% to 80% of all dementia cases, making it by far the most common cause of dementia in older adults.

Alzheimer’s by the Numbers (2025)

Americans age 65+ living with Alzheimer’s 7.2 million
Projected cases by 2060 13.8 million
Percentage of people 65+ affected 1 in 9 (11%)
Percentage of people 85+ affected 1 in 3 (33%)
Ranking as a cause of death in the U.S. 7th (expected to return to 6th)
Deaths from Alzheimer’s increased since 2000 142%
Annual cost of care $384 billion

Almost two-thirds of Americans with Alzheimer’s are women. Older Black Americans are about twice as likely to have Alzheimer’s as older Whites, and older Hispanics are about one and one-half times as likely.

How Alzheimer’s Affects the Brain

In Alzheimer’s disease, two abnormal proteins build up in the brain:

Beta-amyloid plaques — Sticky clumps that form between brain cells and disrupt communication

Tau tangles — Twisted fibers that form inside brain cells and prevent nutrients from moving through them

These changes typically begin in the hippocampus—the part of the brain responsible for forming memories—before spreading to other regions. As more brain cells die, the brain actually shrinks.

Common Symptoms of Alzheimer’s

Early stage:

  • Forgetting recently learned information
  • Asking the same questions repeatedly
  • Difficulty with planning or problem-solving
  • Losing track of dates, seasons, or time
  • Misplacing items and being unable to retrace steps

Middle stage:

  • Forgetting personal history and major events
  • Confusion about where they are or what day it is
  • Difficulty recognizing family members
  • Needing help with daily tasks like bathing and dressing
  • Personality changes, including suspicion and agitation
  • Wandering and getting lost

Late stage:

  • Inability to communicate coherently
  • Loss of awareness of surroundings
  • Difficulty swallowing
  • Loss of bladder and bowel control
  • Requiring around-the-clock care

The average life expectancy after diagnosis is 4 to 8 years, though some people live as long as 20 years with the disease.

What Causes Alzheimer’s?

Scientists don’t fully understand what triggers Alzheimer’s, but research points to a combination of factors:

  • Age — The biggest risk factor; risk doubles every 5 years after age 65
  • Genetics — The APOE-e4 gene significantly increases risk
  • Family history — Having a parent or sibling with Alzheimer’s increases risk
  • Head injuries — Traumatic brain injury is linked to a higher risk
  • Cardiovascular health — Heart disease, diabetes, high blood pressure, and obesity all increase risk

Treating Alzheimer’s Disease

A major breakthrough occurred in 2023-2024 with FDA approval of the first disease-modifying treatments for Alzheimer’s:

Leqembi (lecanemab) — Approved July 2023. Slows cognitive decline by about 27% by clearing amyloid plaques from the brain. Administered via IV infusion every two weeks initially, with a monthly maintenance option approved in January 2025.

Kisunla (donanemab) — Approved July 2024. Slows progression by about 29-35% over 18 months. Administered via monthly IV infusion, with the possibility of stopping treatment once scans show amyloid is cleared.

These treatments are only for people in the early stages of Alzheimer’s with confirmed amyloid plaques. They don’t cure the disease or reverse damage, but they can slow progression and help people maintain independence longer.

Other treatments focus on managing symptoms:

  • Cholinesterase inhibitors (donepezil, rivastigmine, galantamine) — Help with memory and thinking
  • Memantine — Helps with moderate to severe symptoms
  • Behavioral interventions — Music therapy, cognitive stimulation, structured routines

Professional caregiving is essential for people with Alzheimer’s. Because patients can forget where they are or what they’re doing, safety precautions and assistance with daily tasks help maintain quality of life and can delay the need for facility-based care.


Parkinson’s Disease: The Basics

Parkinson’s disease is a progressive neurological disorder that primarily affects movement. It’s the second most common neurodegenerative disease after Alzheimer’s and the most common movement disorder.

Parkinson’s by the Numbers (2025)

Americans living with Parkinson’s Nearly 1 million (1.2 million projected by 2030)
New diagnoses each year in the U.S. 90,000 (50% higher than previous estimates)
Global cases projected by 2050 25 million (112% increase from 2021)
Percentage diagnosed before age 50 4%
Annual economic burden in the U.S. $52 billion

Parkinson’s is more common in men than in women. Geographic clusters have been identified in the “Rust Belt,” Southern California, Southeastern Texas, Central Pennsylvania, and Florida—regions with historical industrial or agricultural chemical exposure.

How Parkinson’s Affects the Brain

Parkinson’s disease develops when neurons in a part of the brain called the substantia nigra begin to die. These neurons produce dopamine, a chemical messenger that helps coordinate smooth, controlled movements.

When dopamine levels drop, the brain can no longer send proper movement signals—leading to tremors, stiffness, and difficulty controlling the body.

In Parkinson’s, abnormal clumps of a protein called alpha-synuclein (known as Lewy bodies) form inside brain cells, disrupting their function. This is different from the amyloid plaques and tau tangles seen in Alzheimer’s.

Common Symptoms of Parkinson’s

Motor symptoms (the hallmarks of Parkinson’s):

  • Tremor — Shaking, usually starting in the hands or fingers
  • Bradykinesia — Slowness of movement
  • Rigidity — Stiff, inflexible muscles
  • Postural instability — Balance problems and risk of falls
  • Gait changes — Shuffling walk, freezing in place

Non-motor symptoms (often overlooked):

  • Sleep disturbances (insomnia, REM sleep behavior disorder)
  • Depression and anxiety
  • Loss of sense of smell
  • Constipation
  • Soft or slurred speech
  • Cognitive changes (in later stages)

Symptoms typically begin on one side of the body and remain worse on that side even as the disease progresses to both sides.

What Causes Parkinson’s?

The exact cause of Parkinson’s remains unknown, but contributing factors include:

  • Age — Primary risk factor; most cases occur after age 60
  • Genetics — Certain gene mutations increase risk, though hereditary Parkinson’s is rare
  • Environmental toxins — Pesticides, herbicides, and industrial chemicals are linked to a higher risk
  • Head trauma — Repeated head injuries may increase risk

Treating Parkinson’s Disease

There is currently no cure for Parkinson’s, but treatments can significantly improve quality of life:

Medications:

  • Levodopa/carbidopa — The most effective treatment; converts to dopamine in the brain
  • Dopamine agonists — Mimic dopamine’s effects
  • MAO-B inhibitors — Prevent dopamine breakdown
  • COMT inhibitors — Extend the effect of levodopa

Surgical options:

  • Deep brain stimulation (DBS) — Electrodes implanted in the brain help regulate abnormal signals and reduce symptoms

Supportive therapies:

  • Physical therapy for mobility and balance
  • Speech therapy for communication difficulties
  • Occupational therapy for daily living skills

Regular exercise is particularly important for people with Parkinson’s—research shows it may help slow symptom progression and improve mobility, balance, and quality of life.


Alzheimer’s vs. Parkinson’s: Key Differences

Alzheimer’s Disease Parkinson’s Disease
Primary symptoms Memory loss, cognitive decline Tremor, slowness, rigidity
Brain changes Amyloid plaques and tau tangles Loss of dopamine-producing neurons, Lewy bodies
Typical age of onset 65+ (most cases) 50-65 (typical onset)
Dementia Present from early stages May develop later (50-80% eventually)
Movement problems Later stages only Present from early stages
U.S. prevalence 7.2 million ~1 million
Disease-modifying treatments Yes (Leqembi, Kisunla) Not yet available

What These Conditions Have in Common

Despite their differences, Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s share several important similarities:

Both Are Age-Related

Age is the greatest risk factor for both diseases. Of the 7.2 million Americans with Alzheimer’s, 74% are age 75 or older. Similarly, the vast majority of Parkinson’s cases occur after age 60.

Both Are Progressive and Incurable

Both diseases worsen over time as more brain cells die. While treatments can manage symptoms and—in Alzheimer’s case—slow progression, neither disease can currently be cured or reversed.

Both Are Neurodegenerative

Both diseases involve the progressive death of brain cells, though they affect different brain regions and involve different abnormal proteins.

Both Can Cause Dementia

While Alzheimer’s is defined by dementia, Parkinson’s can also lead to cognitive decline. Research shows that 50% to 80% of people with Parkinson’s eventually develop dementia, though it typically appears later in the disease course.

The dementia in each condition has different characteristics:

  • Alzheimer’s dementia — Problems storing new memories; information is lost
  • Parkinson’s dementia — Problems retrieving memories; information may be recalled with cues

Both Can Occur Together

Some people develop both conditions. Research has found significant overlap—many Parkinson’s patients show Alzheimer ‘s-related brain changes at autopsy, and many Alzheimer’s patients show Parkinson ‘s-related changes. Scientists are still working to understand the relationship between these diseases.

Both Require Comprehensive Caregiving

Both conditions eventually require assistance with daily activities. Professional home care can help with medication management, safety monitoring, mobility assistance, personal care, and provide respite for family caregivers.


How Home Care Can Help

Whether your loved one has Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, or both, professional in-home care can make a significant difference in their quality of life—and yours.

For Alzheimer’s disease, caregivers can help with:

  • Medication reminders and management
  • Safety supervision to prevent wandering
  • Maintaining consistent daily routines
  • Cognitive stimulation through activities and conversation
  • Assistance with bathing, dressing, and personal care
  • Meal preparation and nutrition support

For Parkinson’s disease, caregivers can help with:

  • Fall prevention and mobility assistance
  • Physical exercise and movement therapy support
  • Medication timing (critical for symptom control)
  • Help with fine motor tasks (buttoning, writing)
  • Meal preparation and feeding assistance
  • Communication support

In both cases, staying in a familiar home environment—rather than moving to a facility—can help maintain a sense of independence and dignity, reduce confusion and anxiety, and improve overall quality of life.


The Bottom Line

Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s are both devastating diagnoses—but they are not the same disease, and understanding the differences matters for getting the right care and treatment.

Alzheimer’s primarily affects memory and cognition from the start

Parkinson’s primarily affects movement, with cognitive changes possible later

Both require early diagnosis and comprehensive care planning

The good news: breakthroughs are happening. The approval of disease-modifying treatments for Alzheimer’s in 2023-2024 represents a turning point, and research into both conditions continues at an unprecedented pace.

In the meantime, proper care—including professional home care—can help people with either condition maintain their quality of life, stay safe at home, and make the most of their time with family.


We Can Help

At All Heart Home Care, we provide specialized in-home care for seniors with Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, and other neurological conditions throughout San Diego County.

Our caregivers are trained to understand the unique challenges of each condition—from managing sundowning behaviors in Alzheimer’s to supporting safe mobility in Parkinson’s.

Call us at (619) 736-4677 for a free in-home consultation. We’ll assess your loved one’s needs and create a personalized care plan that supports their safety, independence, and quality of life.


References

  • Alzheimer’s Association. 2025 Alzheimer’s Disease Facts and Figures. alz.org
  • Parkinson’s Foundation. Statistics. parkinson.org
  • FDA. FDA Approves Treatment for Adults with Alzheimer’s Disease (Kisunla). July 2024. fda.gov
  • Alzheimer’s Association. Lecanemab Approved for Treatment of Early Alzheimer’s. alz.org
  • American Brain Foundation. Disease Connections: Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s. americanbrainfoundation.org
  • BrightFocus Foundation. Alzheimer’s vs. Parkinson’s: A Comparison. February 2025. brightfocus.org
  • The BMJ. Global projections of Parkinson’s disease prevalence to 2050. March 2025.

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About the author

Eric Barth, co-founder and CEO of All Heart Home Care San Diego

Eric Barth

CEO, All Heart Home Care

Eric Barth is the founder and CEO of All Heart Home Care™, an award-winning San Diego agency dedicated to providing compassionate, personalized in-home care for seniors. As the writer behind the All Heart Home Care blog, Eric shares insights and stories drawn from years of hands-on experience leading one of San Diego’s most trusted home care teams.

Additional FAQ's on Digital Home Care System

Yes. HITRUST CSF Certified security—same gold standard hospitals use. More secure than paper.

Extremely rare (99.9% uptime), but caregivers can work in offline mode if connectivity is temporarily lost. Care continues without interruption. Documentation syncs automatically when connection returns.

Caregivers document throughout their shift in real-time. Notes are typically finalized and visible in Family Room within minutes of the caregiver clocking out.

We can set up Family Room accounts for as many family members as you want—local siblings, children in other states, anyone you authorize. Everyone sees the same information. No limit on number of accounts.

Yes. Family Room includes secure document storage. Upload medical records, insurance cards, POLST forms, medication lists, doctor’s instructions, photos—anything important. All authorized family members can access these documents. No more searching for forms.

We update the digital care plan immediately, and all caregivers receive instant notification of changes. This is one of the biggest advantages over paper—updates reach everyone simultaneously, not gradually over days or weeks.

Absolutely. Family Room is a tool for families who want it, not a replacement for human connection. We’re always reachable by phone at (619) 736-4677. Many families use both—portal for quick updates, phone calls for detailed conversations.

We train every caregiver on the WellSky mobile app before their first shift. The app is intuitive—designed specifically for caregivers, not engineers. If someone can text and use GPS navigation, they can use our caregiver app. And we provide ongoing support.

Yes. The Family Room care calendar shows upcoming shifts with caregiver names and times. You’ll know exactly who’s coming and when. No more surprise caregiver switches.

Use the two-way messaging feature in Family Room. Send your message, and the caregiver receives an instant notification on their mobile app. They’ll see it and can respond or confirm receipt immediately.

Yes. All notes are searchable. Want to see every mention of “appetite” from the past month? Type it in the search bar and find all relevant notes instantly. No more flipping through pages of handwritten entries.

You can access the complete care history from the day Family Room access began. Review notes from last week, last month, or since care started. Historical data helps identify patterns over time.

Family members cannot delete caregiver documentation—that’s protected and maintained by All Heart for record-keeping purposes. You can delete your own uploaded documents, but we can often recover those if needed within a certain timeframe.

With your authorization, we can provide limited Family Room access to healthcare providers. This allows better coordination between home care and medical teams. You control exactly who has access and what they can see.

Family Room works both ways. You can access it through any web browser (Chrome, Safari, Firefox, Edge) on your computer, or download the mobile app for easier access on your phone or tablet. Your choice.

All authorized Family Room users see the same care information—we can’t create different access levels for different family members. However, you (as the primary contact) control who gets Family Room access in the first place. If family dynamics are challenging, you decide who receives login credentials.

The messaging system shows when messages are delivered and read. You’ll see confirmation that the caregiver received and opened your message. For critical information, you can also call our office to ensure the message was received.

Yes. You can print individual shift notes, date ranges, or specific types of documentation (like Change of Condition reports) directly from Family Room. Useful for doctor appointments or insurance purposes.

If your loved one transitions to hospice, hospital, or another care setting, we can maintain your Family Room access for a transition period so you have complete records. After care ends, we provide a final data export if requested, then access is closed according to your wishes and legal requirements.

Yes. Family Room is accessible from anywhere with internet connection. If you’re traveling abroad, you can still check on your loved one’s care. The system works globally.

Family Room doesn’t support selective information sharing—all authorized users see the same care documentation. For private family communications, you’d need to use personal email, phone, or text outside the Family Room system.

Change of Condition reports automatically alert you when caregivers document significant health changes. For custom alerts (like specific behaviors or situations), talk to our office—we may be able to add special flags to your loved one’s care plan that trigger notifications.

We typically set up Family Room access during your initial care planning meeting, before the first caregiver shift. You’ll have login credentials and a brief tutorial on how to use the portal. Most families are viewing their first shift notes within 24 hours of care beginning.

Complete Security & Privacy Information

HITRUST CSF Certification - What This Means

HITRUST CSF (Common Security Framework) is the most rigorous security certification in healthcare. It's harder to achieve than HIPAA compliance alone. This certification requires:

Why it matters: If it’s secure enough for hospital patient records, it’s secure enough for your loved one’s care information.

Bank-Level Encryption Explained

Data in Storage (At Rest):

Data in Transmission (In Transit):

What this means: Even if someone intercepted the data (extremely unlikely), they would only see scrambled, unreadable information.

Strict Access Controls

Who Can See What

Family Member Access:

Caregiver Access:

Staff Access:

Audit Trail:

HIPAA Compliance - Federal Protection

The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) establishes federal standards for protecting health information. Our compliance includes:

Privacy Rule Compliance:

Security Rule Compliance:

Breach Notification:

Business Associate Agreements:

Continuous Backup & Disaster Recovery

Automated Backups:

Redundancy:

Disaster Recovery Plan:

What this guarantees: Your loved one’s care information is never truly lost. Even if an entire data center were destroyed, complete backups exist elsewhere.

99.9% Uptime Guarantee

What “99.9% uptime” means:

Monitoring:

If the system goes down:

Multi-Factor Authentication (Optional)

For families who want extra security, we can enable multi-factor authentication (MFA):

Mobile Device Security

Caregiver Phones:

Your Devices:

Security Incident Response

In the extremely unlikely event of a security concern:

Digital vs. Paper Security Comparison

Security Concern
Paper Binders
WellSky_Color

Who can read it?

Anyone who enters the home

Only authorized users

Can it be lost?

✔︎ — permanently

— backed up continuously

Can it be damaged?

✔︎ — spills, fires, floods

— stored digitally

Is access tracked?

✔︎ Access logged & audited

Encryption protection?

✔︎ — bank-level encryption

Updates reach everyone?

— printing/distribution delays

✔︎ — instant notification

Survives disasters?

✔︎ — redundant backups

HIPAA compliant?

— difficult to prove

✔︎ — certified & audited

Can be accidentally discarded?

✔︎

— requires a password

Verdict: Digital is significantly more secure than paper in every measurable way.

Common Security Questions

"What if I forget my password?"

Secure password reset process via email or phone verification. We verify your identity before resetting access.

"Can hackers access the system?"

Multiple layers of security make unauthorized access extremely difficult. Regular penetration testing simulates attacks to identify and fix vulnerabilities before hackers can exploit them.

"What if my phone is stolen?"

Change your password immediately from any other device. The thief would still need your password to access Family Room.

"Can All Heart staff see my credit card information?"

No. Payment processing is handled by a separate, PCI-compliant payment processor. We never see or store your full credit card number.

"What happens to the data if I stop using All Heart?"

Your data is retained according to legal requirements (typically 7 years for healthcare records), then securely deleted. You can request a copy of your data at any time.

This isn’t just secure—it’s among the most secure systems available in healthcare.

Your information is safer in our digital system than it ever was in a paper binder sitting on a kitchen counter.

Complete Care Plan Contents:

Care Goals & Priorities

Emergency Contact Information

Medical Conditions & Health History

Mental Health & Cognitive Status

Medications & Supplements

Mobility & Transfers

Personal Care Routines

Meal Preparation & Dietary Needs

Daily Routines & Schedules

Activities & Engagement

Home Environment Details

Transportation & Driving

Additional Important Information

This comprehensive information ensures every caregiver provides consistent, personalized care from day one.

Tracking health changes that matter.

The Change of Condition form documents significant shifts in your loved one’s health—new symptoms, changes in mobility, behavioral differences, or improvements in their condition. This isn’t about minor day-to-day variations; it’s about meaningful changes that physicians, families, and caregivers need to know about.

Why have a separate form for this?

Instead of searching through weeks of caregiver narratives to find when symptoms started or conditions changed, this form puts all significant health changes in one easy-to-reference place. When doctors ask “when did the difficulty walking begin?” or family members want to understand the progression of a condition, you’ll have clear, dated documentation right at your fingertips.

What gets documented:

Each entry includes:

Why this form matters:

Early detection changes outcomes. When caregivers notice something different—increased confusion, difficulty walking, loss of appetite, or even positive improvements like better mobility—documenting it immediately allows for faster responses.

Your family stays informed about meaningful health changes. Physicians receive accurate updates during appointments instead of relying on memory. Incoming caregivers know exactly what’s changed and what new precautions or assistance your loved one needs.

One form. Complete health timeline. Better care.

Whether tracking a temporary change after a fall or documenting the progression of a chronic condition, the Change of Condition form creates a clear health timeline. This helps everyone—doctors, family members, and our San Diego caregiver team—understand how your loved one’s needs are evolving and respond appropriately.

Proactive monitoring isn’t just good practice. It’s essential senior care.

How the Caregiver Narrative works.

Each caregiver documents their shift using a simple timeline format that captures the essential details of your loved one’s day. This structured approach ensures consistency across all caregivers and makes information easy to find.

What we document in every narrative:

Narrative Format:

Each entry follows this structure:

Why this format works:

This timeline approach provides clear, chronological documentation that’s easy for incoming caregivers to read and understand. Instead of wondering what happened during the previous shift, they can see exactly what your loved one ate, how they felt, what activities they enjoyed, and any health changes observed.

One record. Every shift. Complete continuity.

Whether care is short-term, long-term, or evolving, the Caregiver Narrative ensures nothing gets missed and nothing gets repeated. Your family can review the journal at any time during visits, or we can share photos of recent narratives with long-distance family members who want to stay connected and informed.

Complete transparency and peace of mind, right when you need it.

Your loved one's complete care roadmap, now available digitally.

The All Heart Customized Care Plan is completed during your initial assessment and tailored to your loved one’s specific needs, preferences, mobility level, and safety requirements.

Now fully digital and accessible on every caregiver’s phone.

We’ve gone paperless. Your care plan is accessible through our digital platform—caregivers reference it anytime, anywhere. Updates happen in real-time, so when something changes, every caregiver sees it immediately.

What's included:

Care goals, emergency contacts, medical conditions, mental health & cognitive status, medications & supplements, mobility & transfers, personal care routines, meal prep & dietary needs, daily routines, activities & engagement, and home environment details.

One plan. Every caregiver. Consistent care.

This digital approach ensures every San Diego caregiver has the same accurate, up-to-date information from day one—promoting safety, continuity, and person-centered care.

See how we organize care information. This form becomes your loved one’s digital care roadmap.