At the outset, I should emphasize the term “sundowning” is overly simplistic, as it’s a shorthand term that can encompass a vast number of behaviors in many different contexts. When assessing changed behaviors in dementia, it’s always better to hear a full and accurate description of what the person is actually doing at these times, rather than to just accept that “they’re sundowning.”
This set of behaviors commonly described as “sundowning” often includes (but is not limited to) confusion, anxiety, agitation, pacing, and “shadowing” others. It may look different depending on the stage of dementia, the person’s personality and past behavior patterns, and the presence of specific triggers.
Why then, do such altered behaviors tend to happen at specific times of the day? And what should you do when it happens to your loved one?

Fading Light
We all interpret the world via the information that enters our brains through our five senses. Chief among these are sight and sound.Imagine the difficulty you’d have if asked to perform a complex task while in a darkened room.
People living with dementia are just as dependent on sensory input to make sense of and correctly interpret their environment.
Cognitive Exhaustion
We have all heard it said that we only use a fraction our brain power, and it is true we all have far more brain power than we typically require for most of the day’s mundane tasks.This “cognitive reserve” can be brought to bear when we are faced with complex or stressful tasks that require more mental effort. But what if you just don’t have much cognitive reserve?
During that time, in simple terms, the condition eats away at our cognitive reserve.
It is only when the damage done is so significant our brains can no longer compensate for it that we develop the first symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias.
So by the time someone first presents with very early dementia symptoms, a lot of damage has already been done. Cognitive reserve has been lost, and the symptoms of memory loss finally become apparent.
As a result, people living with dementia are required to exert far more mental effort during the course of a routine day than most of us.
We have all felt cognitively exhausted, run-down, and perhaps somewhat irritable after a long day doing a difficult task that has consumed an extreme amount of mental effort and concentration.
Those living with dementia are required to exert similar amounts of mental effort just to get through their daytime routine.

What Should I Do If It Happens to My Loved One?
The homes of people living with dementia should be well-lit in the late afternoons and evenings when the sun is going down to help the person with dementia integrate and interpret sensory input.However, there is no substitute for a fuller assessment of the other causes that might contribute to altered behavior.
