Studies have shown that everything from brushing your teeth to climbing the stairs can reveal signs of early dementia. And now, it seems that how you eat your dinner could indicate whether or not you’ve got a condition called frontotemporal dementia .

The uncommon subtype of dementia affects about one in every 20 dementia patients, Dementia UK says.

They say it’s an “umbrella term for a group of dementias that mainly affect the frontal and temporal lobes of the brain, which are responsible for personality, behaviour, language and speech”.

And unlike other forms of dementia, its early stages may not always be characterised by memory loss or impaired concentration.

Instead, one of the symptoms of behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia (bv FTD) is “obsessive or repetitive beha

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