Home Health Alzheimer’s: The Unforgettable Disease

Alzheimer’s: The Unforgettable Disease

by Jeremy Holcombe

Alzheimer’s Disease is a common disease but is often misunderstood.

Dr. Russell Blaylock, an internationally known brain expert, believes that brain diseases are appearing:

  • Earlier in life
  • More frequently
  • To a more severe degree than previously thought

Blaylock claims to identify the seven primary events that trigger Alzheimer’s. Blaylock does offer some positive news. He shares his strategies for repairing Alzheimer’s damage in this video:

Surprising Causes of Alzheimer’s

You’ve Bumped Your Head Too Many Times

With over 300,000 athletes getting sports-related concussion every year, lots of people are familiar with the worries that can go with a head injury. Most recover without a problem, but for some, the inflammation that helps to heal becomes chronic. This is where possible connections to Alzheimer’s Disease can be found.

Cells called microglia are important in inflammation. When the microglia persists in a pro-inflammatory state, they are not as able to remove amyloid beta from the brain.

Without microglia to remove the misfolded proteins, it will build up in the brain and kill neurons.

Sleep-Deprived

A lack of sleep has reached epidemic levels recently. As people try to juggle career, children, marriage and hobbies, lots of people find that something has to give. Many choose to sacrifice sleep. In addition to making a person drowsy behind the wheel, sleep loss can speed up the progression of Alzheimer’s Disease.

Lonely?

Staying connected with friends is part of what people consider the “good life.” It is good medicine as well. A study in the Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry identifies connections between loneliness and the start of dementia. The researchers found that loneliness in older adults puts them at almost twice the odds of developing dementia.

Brain Diabetes

Some researchers think that Alzheimer’s is a metabolic disease that afflicts the brain. The connections are so close that some physicians refer to Alzheimer’s Disease as Type 3 diabetes.

Brain cells utilize glucose as fuel and insulin instructs the cells to sip blood glucose. Brain cells can develop insulin resistance as other cells do.

Symptoms

Initially, forgetfulness or slight confusion might be the sole symptoms of Alzheimer’s Disease. Over time, the affliction robs a person of more of the memory — particularly recent memories. The speed at which symptoms advance varies between people.

Brain changes connected with Alzheimer’s Disease lead to growing problems with:

Memory

Everybody has occasional memory lapses. It is normal to forget where you left the keys or even someone’s name. But memory loss connected with Alzheimer’s Disease is chronic and gets worse.

Thinking and Reasoning

Alzheimer’s Disease creates trouble focusing and thinking — especially about abstract concepts like numbers. Multitasking is challenging and it can be difficult to handle banking, manage checkbooks, and pay bills timely. The difficulties might progress to the total incapacity to understand numbers.

Make Judgments and Decisions

Reacting efficiently to routine problems, such as food cooking in the oven, becomes more challenging.

Planning Familiar Tasks

What were once routine tasks that need consecutive actions become a strain? People with advanced Alzheimer’s Disease might forget how to complete  basic tasks such as dressing and showering.

Personality Changes

Brain alterations that happen can influence the behavior of persons. Individuals with Alzheimer’s Disease may experience:

  • Grief
  • Apathy
  • Social isolation
  • Mood shifts
  • Loss of inhibitions
  • Hallucinations

Usually, skills such as reading, dancing, and hobbies acquired early in life are usually the final abilities to be dropped as the affliction worsens. The portion of the mind that stores the information is apt to be affected later in the disease’s course.

Sadly, there isn’t much that loved ones can do for someone with Alzheimer’s — other than to be there.

Noted author, Melody Beattie, said:

“I gave three years of my life to take care of my dying mother who had Alzheimer’s Disease. Being there for her every need for three years might have looked codependent but it wasn’t because it was what I wanted to do.”

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