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Alzheimer's Disease Is A Brain Disorder That Results In Progressive Memory Deterioration. Considered The Primary Reason Why A Person Experiences Dementia, Alzheimer's Affects Family Members In A Profound Way. Welcome To AlzheimersDementiaInfo.com. We Are Here To Provide A Free Educational Resource About Alzheimer's Disease And Dementia. As
You Explore This Site, You'll Discover...
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Alzheimer's Disease - 'The Living Death'
Author: Mike Herman
Alzheimer's disease or the 'living death' was named after Dr
Alois Alzheimer who discovered it in 1907, when he described the
amazing effects the disease had on the brain of a 51 year old
woman who had apparently died of dementia.
When examined under a microscope, her brain showed changes that
had never been seen before.
While in some parts there was a clumping of brain matter in
other parts it was tangled together.
When his research discovered the same twisting and deformations
in other patients who died of similar causes the condition
carried his name and became known as Alzheimer's disease.
However, his research coincidentally concentrated on younger
patients so at first this produced a false impression that
Alzeimer's disease only affected the young, with older sufferers
being falsely diagnosed with pre-senile dementia or senile
dementia of the Alzheimer type (SDAT).
Now we know that the reverse is actually true and that
Alzheimer's, with its distinctive brain abnormalities, is much
more common in older patients than on the young.
This initial confusion has complicated matters enormously
because now the whole group of conditions are all known as
Alzheimer's disease.
The Royal College of Physicians describes Alzheimer's disease as
follows ... "Dementia is the global impairment of higher
functions, including memory, the capacity to solve the problems
of day to day living, the performance of learned perceptuo-motor
skills (our learned responses such as washing, dressing and
eating), the correct use of social skills, and the control of
emotional reactions in the absence of gross clouding of
consciousness."
This definition can't possibly convey the complex symptoms and
distress that characterise this condition.
Those who personally know and love someone who suffers from it
describe the gradual loss of memory, impaired judgement and
changes in behaviour and temperament as 'a living death'.
About the author:
Discover the information you need to know about Alzheimer's and
all forms of dementia. The risks, potential causes, available
treatments, daily activities, and more at www.Answers4Alzheimer
s.com
Article Keywords:
Alzheimer's |
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A Quick Note
From The Publisher...
If you like the article above, you may be
interested in the following article which is also related to Alzheimer's...
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Your Emotions Can Put You at-Risk for Alzheimer's |
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Still don’t believe anger kills, and stress ages you? In a recent study re: Alzheimer’s disease (AD) the psychological assessment included these questions: “I am not a worrier,” “I often feel tense and jittery,” and “I often get angry at the way people treat me.” The study included 797 individuals with an average age of 75. Research has proven that chronic stress is associated with changes in the hippocampus (an area of the brain), as does chronic depression, and problems with learning and memory. Researchers therefore suspected that people who frequently experience psychological distress might be at increased risk for AD. Their suspicions were confirmed. Participants were also tested on episodic memory, as impaired episodic memory is a symptom of the disease. According to the study, reported in PsychiatryMatters.MD, “over an average 4.9 year follow-up, 140 individuals were diagnosed with AD. In addition, those classified as being highly prone to stress (90th percentile) were shown... |
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