Alzheimer’s Violeta Mota Brookline College August 1, 2017 Alzheimer’s Reaserching Alszheimer’s disease expanded my knowledge immensely form the common thought of it being a disease that causes the elderly to loose their memory. This disease has been proven to affect 200,000 civilians younger than 65. It is the 6th leading cause of death in the us. Those who get this disease live an average of 8 years. In the first stages of these disease there is mild memory loss but in the last stages the patient can’t carry a normal conversation.…
Alzheimer's ailment is the most widely recognized type of dementia and affects up to 70% of all people with dementia. It was first recorded in 1907 by Dr Alois Alzheimer. Dr Alzheimer revealed the instance of Auguste Deter, a middle-aged woman with dementia and particular changes in her mind. FFor the following 60 years Alzheimer's ailment was viewed as an uncommon condition that influenced individuals less than 65 years old. It was not until the 1970s that Dr Robert Katzman proclaimed (rather intensely at the time) that "senile dementia" and Alzheimer's disease were the same condition and that neither were a normal part of…
With aging, there are short-term memory loss; however, dementia strongly impairs cognitive function, such as issues with language, communication, comprehension, and overall personality changes. Specifically, “Dementia describes a chronic and progressive…
Meryl Comer, lost a loved one to Alzheimer’s, points out “we’re really a composite of our life experiences – memory layered upon memory and Alzheimer’s steals that away.” Memories are what most people are made up of, but the people who have Alzheimer’s disease no longer remember what memories are. Instead, they see faces and are surrounded by unfamiliar people and places. When signs of Alzheimer’s begin to appear in a beloved family member the person wishes there was a cure because that person knows their loved one will pass away with no chance of survival. Alzheimer’s is the most common form of dementia.…
This definition of Alzheimer’s intertwines the signs and symptoms of dementia and the underlying brain changes. Epidemiology With the increasing life expectancy and availability of better healthcare systems, the population of elderly is increasing…
Dementia is a term used to explain the decline or breakdown in multiple areas of human brain functions including but not limited to thinking, perception, communication, memory, languages, reasoning, and the ability to operate as a human being. Dementia can affect people of any and all ages anywhere in the world. An important fact about dementia is that it is an organic brain syndrome and not a disease, the origin of the word dementia is from a Latin word “demeans” meaning insane or being out of one’s mind. Dementia includes damage of nerve cells in the brain and the general breakdown of vital human functions; depending on how this damage is caused, dementia may affect people differently.…
Being the sixth leading cause of death in the U.S makes Alzheimer’s a common disease among older adults. Alzheimer’s is a continuous neurological disease that affects an individual’s memory, orientation and judgement. While damage begins to spread throughout the brain many abilities are lost. Cells lose the ability to perform these functions and end up making irreversible changes to the individual’s brain. Since Alzheimer’s is also a form of dementia it worsens over time.…
Dementia isn’t a certain disease. It is instead a general term that defines a board spectrum of symptoms. These symptoms are associated with a loss of memory or other thinking skills bad enough to lessen peoples’ ability to perform daily activities. Dementia can be seen apparently in two brain functions, which are memory loss and damaged judgement or language, and the incapability of performing daily responsibilities such as due dates, becoming lost while driving for periods of time and bills needing to be paid. Although memory loss is a symptom of dementia, memory loss itself does not mean that you have dementia.…
This will the lead me to explain what Alzheimer’s disease is exactly. Alzheimer’s disease is a growing brain disorder, which slowly deteriorates the brain functions. Alzheimer’s is a synaptic failure, it just stops firing and eventually will die off. Alzheimer’s disease gives you some sort of memory failure. Which can make anyone scared if they thought they were losing their memory.…
Alzheimer’s disease (AD), was discovered as senile form of dementia in early 1907 by Alois Alzheimer in 1907. Since then the disease has been researched and studied to generate a knowledge base of symptoms, etiology, pathogenesis, treatment and management of the disease. AD is differentiated from senile dementia due to the neurodegenerative process which involves deposits of protein known as amyloid in neurons and neurofibrillary tangles which form plaques. This formation of plaques leads to neuron death and the hardening of tissue leads to progressive and terminal neurological disease state. There has been no cure to Alzheimer’s disease to the complexity of disease and the lack of understanding of amyloid protein and its process.…
Alzheimer’s Association also defines the word “dementia” as a general term we use for the decline of memory loss and mental ability for everyday life. Just hearing those definitions, most people still won’t understand why we need a cure, or they use these words carelessly and in the wrong situations. According to the Alzheimer’s Association Foundation, in both cases, the neurons of the brain who has the disease “break connections with other nerve cells and ultimately die.”…
Dementia is a disease that over a couple of a million people are diagnosed with every single year in the United States alone. Stark writes, “Dementia is the loss of cognitive and social abilities to the degree that it interferes with activities of daily living” (1). This very common disease can go as far as causing death to many people per year. In some rare cases it is possible that dementia can be reversible, but it is more likely to be irreversible. Elders are more likely to be diagnosed than younger people because the risk of dementia increases with age.…
Where is the cure for Alzheimer’s disease? The most common form of dementia is, Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Alzheimer’s can be defined as a disease that includes memory loss and inabilities that affect daily life.…
In today’s world it seems like there is a growing number of people that are being plagued with mental health diseases. In particular Alzheimer’s appears to affect a growing number of people each year. Alzheimer’s is considered to be the “sixth leading cause of death in the United States today” (Latest Alzheimer 's Facts and Figures, 2016). While many research is being conducted to figure out the best way to combat this, there seems to be one deterrent that stands above all.…
Alzheimer's Association characterized that, alzheimer is a kind of dementia that causes issues with memory, deduction and conduct. Manifestations generally grow gradually and deteriorate after some time, getting to be sufficiently serious to meddle with day by day undertakings. It is one of the frightening diseases, as it shows no symptoms in the beginning. It often starts to appear when someone in theirs 40s or 50s. Then, they can not do anything, because it is incurable.…