Alzheimer Disease International Article

Alzheimers Disease
By Steven Godlewski

Alzheimers disease robs you of intellectual and social abilities and interferes with regular life. About 4.5 million Americans have Alzheimers Disease. The disease usually affects seniors over the age of 65. As the population ages this number is expected to quadruple.

There is no cure for Alzheimers disease. There is progress being made by researchers to improve the quality of life for those who have Alzheimers. Drugs are being discovered and studied which may lead to treatments of the disease.

If you have been a caretaker of a loved one with Alzheimers disease, or have a loved one suffering with it, you know that it takes patience and love to keep you and them going.

If you think a loved one may be showing early signs of Alzheimers Disease, what should you look for? One of the most prominent signs of Alzheimers Disease is forgetfulness. It starts out with occasional forgetting simple directions or recent events. It progressively gets worse until the patient may forget even family names and objects they see every day. They also may repeat things they've already told someone, and put objects down and forget where they placed them. On the other hand, they might put something away so they will remember where they put it, and put it in such an illogical place that no one can find it.

Early Alzheimers Disease patients have trouble conducting conversation and finding the right words to say. They may have a hard time following conversations or expressing their feelings. Eventually their reading and writing ability will also be affected.

Abstract thinking is something else that these patients with Alzheimers disease have. They may suddenly be able to deal with numbers, especially in balancing the checkbook. Disorientation causes them to lose track of time, and it is easier for them to get lost. They may feel they are in unfamiliar surroundings even if they are home.

They have trouble with everyday problems, such as knowing that food has been on the stove too long. Patients with Alzheimers disease eventually have problems dealing with planning, judgment, and decision-making. Familiar tasks become a struggle, even the basic activities like dressing or remembering to bathe.

One of the most distressing symptoms of Alzheimers disease is the personality changes that affect them. It is not uncommon for a patient with Alzheimers disease to have extreme mood swings and often accompanied by depression. They may begin distrusting those around them, be increasingly stubborn, and withdraw from family and friends. As their Alzheimers disease get progressively worse, they may become defiant, stubborn, aggressive, and take part in inappropriate behavior.

One report tells of a wonderful woman, whom was a good mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother that had been afflicted with Alzheimers disease. When her family was forced to put her in a nursing home due to the Alzheimers disease, she became aggressive to other patients and began using language she never would have dreamed of using before she fell victim to Alzheimers disease. The staff had a hard time in restraining her in the nursing home. They found she was sneaking in to other patient's rooms, uncovering them, and leaving them. This was so unlike the mother and grandmother they knew before the affliction of Alzheimers disease, they had a hard time even visiting. Most of the time, she wouldn't remember her daughter being there that morning. Finally, her family put an erasable board in her room so her visitors could write their name and the date they visited allowing the family to know who was there and when.

Unfortunately, families don't often recognize the onset of Alzheimers disease because it starts out so slow. There usually are no sudden changes in the personality to alert family members there is a problem. As the symptoms gradually get worse, or they realize memory is fleeting for their loved one, they may not realize until the patient is far into the advanced stages of Alzheimers disease.

How Alzheimers disease progresses and what the average survival rate will be depends on the individual. The average survival rate is eight years. Some live fewer years, and some could live up to 20 years with the disease. People with Alzheimers disease eventually will no longer be able to take care of themselves. This leaves loved ones with the burden of deciding whether to place the patient in a long-term care facility or try to take care of them at home. It's a difficult decision and everyone must realize that it takes considerable attention, love, and patience to deal with the problems that come with Alzheimers disease.

Steven Godlewski is a self-made millionaire and is currently working with Life Force International products. He has an extensive background in nutrition as well as other health related fields. For more health-related articles and a FREE bottle of Liquid Vitamins see their website at: http://www.pillfreevitamins.com SEE video at: http://www.emii-dcf.org

Recommended Products



____________________


Related Alzheimer Disease International Videos


Alzheimer Disease International News


InforSense Partners With the U.K.'s South London and Maudsley NHS ... - Mark...

2 Dec 2008 at 2:00am  LONDON and CAMBRIDGE, MA--(Marketwire - December 2, 2008) - InforSense Ltd., the leading provider of next generation business and scientific intelligence tools , today announced that the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical ...

Read more...


Prana Provides Update on Research and Development Programs at AGM - MSN Money...

1 Dec 2008 at 7:23am  Prana Biotechnology Limited (NASDAQ: PRAN) (ASX: PBT) today provided an update of highlights of current and future activities of the Company at the Annual General Meeting. PBT2 for Alzheimer's Disease Chairman and CEO, Geoffrey Kempler, discussed the ...

Read more...


Pilot's life is hijacked by early-onset Alzheimer's disease - Pittsburgh Post...

29 Nov 2008 at 5:55pm  Alan Romatowski, 57, has been diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer's disease. His home is set in a wooded area of Middlesex, Butler County. Alan Romatowski sits in the tasteful suburban living room of his older neighbors listening to Georgia Molloy ...

Read more...


Study Recruiting From Alzheimer's-Prone Families - BusinessWeek

27 Nov 2008 at 5:58pm  FRIDAY, Nov. 28 (HealthDay News) -- The adult children of people with the rarer, inherited form of Alzheimer's disease are being sought for a new study to better understand the biology of the brain disorder. Three hundred adults with a biological ...

Read more...


Japan leader irks public with insensitive remark - San Francisco Gate

27 Nov 2008 at 10:41am  Japan's gaffe-prone prime minister is in trouble again ? this time for a remark criticizing the elderly for racking up medical expenses and being a tax burden. "They're hobbling around and constantly going to the doctor," Prime Minister Taro Aso ...

Read more...


Japan's PM does it again - Globe and Mail

27 Nov 2008 at 7:56am  TOKYO ? Japan's gaffe-prone Prime Minister Taro Aso is in trouble again ? this time for a remark criticizing the elderly for racking up medical expenses and being a tax burden. ?They're hobbling around and constantly going to the doctor,? Mr ...

Read more...


Ready for Armageddon, church retails to the masses - News1130.com

25 Nov 2008 at 2:58am  Edward R. Murrow Award for spot news coverage from the Radio-Television News Directors Association International, for coverage of the oil pipeline explosion in Burrard Inlet. From the BC Association of Broadcasters (BCAB), for Excellence in News ...

Read more...


Alzheimer Disease International Links

Alzheimer Disease International
Looking for Alzheimer Disease International?
www.Shopica.org

Blinkx Video Search
World's largest video search engine. Over 26 million hours of video.
www.blinkx.com

Alzheimer Disease
Helpful Links for Alzheimer Disease.
www.ToSeekA.org

Watching You, Watching Me...
The video takeover. Heavy is heavy. Hot chicks, the best crashes, hardest hits and viral flicks. The Sumo has landed.
www.heavy.com

Video News & Entertainment
Get breaking news stories in streaming video. Today's top stories in Entertainment, Health and More. Always Free!
www.ivillage.com

Modded Xbox
Reseller of all types of Xbox mod chips.