55KRC: UC expert discusses dementia following Bruce Willis diagnosis
The University of Cincinnati’s Rhonna Shatz, DO, recently joined 55KRC’s Simply Medicine radio show and podcast following the announcement that actor Bruce Willis has been diagnosed with frontotemporal dementia.
Willis disclosed in 2022 that he had been diagnosed with aphasia, a language disorder that can look like problems with word choice or grammar. While not commenting directly on Willis’s case, Shatz said aphasia is often the first presenting symptom of a more specific neurological disorder.
“It’s not unusual for people in their 40s and 50s and 60s to have diseases like Alzheimer’s disease presenting with a language disorder, something we call primary progressive aphasia,” said Shatz, adjunct associate professor, division director for behavioral neurology, and the Bob and Sandy Heimann Endowed Chair in Research and Education in Alzheimer’s Disease in the UC College of Medicine and a UC Health physician.
Willis is 67 years old, and Shatz said symptoms of dementia can be different in younger populations compared to the “traditional” first symptom of memory loss.
Shatz said people should schedule an appointment as soon as they notice any sort of change that’s neurologically “different than you’re used to.”
“Whether it’s more effort in doing usual things, if it’s feeling like you’re just not as sharp as you used to be, it’s harder to come up with words or even harder to keep track of things, the thing to know is you need it checked out,” she said.
Listen to the Simply Medicine segment. (Note: Segment begins around 25:46 mark.)
Related Stories
What Is Public Health Nursing? Career path and whether it’s right for you
April 6, 2026
When nurses consider graduate school, many immediately think of becoming a nurse practitioner. But there is another advanced path that is growing in demand, one focused not on treating individual patients, but on improving the health of entire communities: public health nursing.
What is the 'cicada' COVID variant?
April 6, 2026
A formerly rare strain of COVID, BA.3.2, now is showing up in Ohio and 24 other states. Experts say so far it hasn't caused illness any more severe than other strains, but it might be somewhat more resistant to vaccines, as 91.7 WVXU News recently reported. Scientists have nicknamed the variant "cicada" due to its former low profile and current resurgence.
UC opens zebrafish research facility to study infertility
April 6, 2026
The University of Cincinnati is launching a state-of-the-art zebrafish research facility that scientists say could help explain how environmental toxins affect fertility, as WKRC-TV/Local 12 and WLWT-TV/Ch. 5 recently reported.