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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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What Is Alzheimer’s Disease?
Author: Gray Rollins

Alzheimer’s is a devastating disease that robs individuals of their memories, ability to recognize their loved ones or even to complete simple tasks for themselves, but there are treatments available to help slow the course of Alzheimer’s disease and researchers are working hard to find a cure.

Alzheimer’s disease is considered a condition of the elderly affecting mostly those over the age of 65. While there are so called early onset cases that occur in younger adults they are rare. 23,000 people die each year in the United States from Alzheimer’s disease. It is the leading cause of dementia, making it the eighth leading cause of death among older Americans. Though there is currently no cure for the condition, understanding the progress of the disease can help researchers, care-giving family members and those afflicted.

The disease is hallmarked by atrophy, or shrinking, of the cortical tissues in the brain. In people with Alzheimer’s disease nerve cells become bunched together forming tangled webs of brain tissue filaments (neurofibrillary tangles) and near these tangles patches of cellular debris, called senile plaques, are found. Plaques are made up of dead cells and proteins. It is believed that these brain abnormalities cause a disruption of the electrical impulses in the brain. As more and more tangles and plaques collect in the brain the body receives fewer and fewer messages from it and the person’s ability to function deteriorates.

According to Elder Rage author and radio host Jacqueline Marcell the warning signs of the affliction include: memory loss, difficulty performing familiar tasks, problems with language, disorientation to time and place, poor or decreased judgment, problems with abstract thinking, misplacing things, changes in mood or behavior, changes in personality and loss of initiative. “You don’t need to have a doctorate degree to know something is wrong,” Ms. Marcell writes in her blog, “but you do need a doctor who can diagnose and treat (Alzheimer’s) properly.”

Right now the aim of treatment is to slow or mask the cognitive deterioration caused by the disease and to increase the brains ability to think, recognize, perceive and judge. Treatment is also helpful in reducing the behavioral problems associated with the more advanced stages of the disease. The side effects for the most commonly used medications: Aricept, Cognex, Exelon and Namenda can include nausea and vomiting, liver damage, psychiatric disturbances, weight loss, tremor, sore muscles, fatigue, dizziness and urinary tract problems. Razadyne is the exception; though there are risks for nausea and vomiting and a few other problematic symptoms, no serious side effects have been reported.

Some treatments work better than others and differently for different patients, so every patient needs to have their symptoms and treatment responses reevaluated frequently. Flexible, supervised care from a knowledgeable physician is of paramount importance.

Alzheimer’s disease isn’t curable but there are treatments that can slow its progress and promising research that may one day lead to a cure. Understanding the stages of the disease and its progression can help those who are afflicted, their loved ones and researchers ensure the best treatment now and promote hope for the future.

About The Author

Gray Rollins is a featured writer for http://www.foralzheimers.com. To learn more about alzheimer's disease, visit http://www.foralzheimers.com/alzheimersdisease/.

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Major News in the Research of Alzheimer's Disease
Major news in the research on Alzheimer's Possible Cure For Memory Loss Or Alzheimer's Disease is very close New Weapons Available For Those Afflicted Two Nobel Prize Winners Are Hot On The Trail To A Breakthrough May 2005, Clarksburg,MD -Researchers funded by the Alzheimer's Disease Research including TWO Nobel Prize winners--have made breakthrough discoveries that may signal the end of the Alzheimer's reign of terror! Thanks to the biggest research breakthroughs since Alzheimer's was discovered in 1906, we may be at the end of this horrible disease said Dr Brian K. Regan, Ph.D. Dr. Stanley Prusiner won the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1997 for his discovery of a new class of disease-causing agents called prions. The study of prions may unlock the final mysteries of the disease process of Alzheimer's. The 2000 Nobel prize in Medicine went to Dr. Paul Greene and two other researchers for their groundbreaking discoveries of the mechanisms by which the brain cells transfer...
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Free seminar on Alzheimer's planned in Shelburne (The Burlington Free Press)
SHELBURNE -- The public is invited to "Current Minded: How People with Alzheimer's Disease are Remembering Who We Are," at 6:30 p.m., Jan. 21 at The Arbors at Shelburne senior living community. Michael Verde, founder of Memory Bridge, will present a seminar on how people with Alzheimer's disease and dementia are as present in the world as those without memory impairments. Verde will also address ...

Bill introduced to study those affected by Alzheimer’s disease (North Little Rock Times)
Former University of Arkansas Athletic Director Frank Broyles and representatives from the state House and Senate gathered Dec. 8 to introduce a bill that will create a government mandated task force, to study the needs of those affected by Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias.

Intellect Neurosciences, Inc. Grants to Top Tier Global Pharmaceutical Company License to Certain Alzheimer's Patents ... (PR Newswire via Yahoo! Finance)
Intellect Neurosciences, Inc. , a biopharmaceutical company focused on development of disease-modifying therapeutic agents for the treatment and prevention of Alzheimer's disease , announced today that it has granted a non-exclusive License to a top-tier global pharmaceutical company regarding certain of Intellect's patents and patent applications related to antibodies and methods of treatment ...

UM Scientists Say They Identified Alzheimer's Genes (Local 10 Miami)
A group of scientists at the University of Miami said they have identified nine genes whose presence indicates an increased chance of getting Alzheimer's disease.

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