Showing posts with label Alzheimer's Disease Signs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alzheimer's Disease Signs. Show all posts

Monday, June 23, 2014

Alzheimer's Disease Symptoms

Alzheimer's Disease Symptoms
What is Alzheimer's Disease? Throughout the world, this neurologic health disorder is become more and more prevalent in modern society. Alzheimer's disease, also called Primary Degenerative Dementia, accounts for nearly half of all the dementia cases recorded each year. Its onset generally begins in the middle ages and because this disease is progressive than the prognosis for patients who have this disease is extremely poor.



However, what are the signs and symptoms of this depressing condition? The onset of Alzheimer's disease is very insidious. At first, the person who has Alzheimer's disease goes under small and imperceptible changes. These imperceptible changes are things like recent memory loss, a difficult in learning things and/or remembering new information. A person may experience forgetfulness, deterioration in their personal hygiene and appearance, and may have a great inability to concentrate. These small imperceptible changes often occur gradually. Other tasks that may require a person to think abstractly and do activities that may require judgment will become more and more difficult for that person to do.



Now, as the disease continues to progress more rapidly, there will be an increased difficulty in communication and that person will have deterioration in memory, language, and motor functions. This will result in a loss of coordination and an inability to write or speak in the person suffering from Alzheimer. During this stage, the person may start to exhibit personality changes like irritability and restlessness, and they may have nocturnal (nightly) awakenings.



Some other signs of this disease are that the person will start to lose eye contact with other people. They may even start to have fearful looks, wring their hands, and display other signs of extreme anxiety. When this happens the person suffering from Alzheimer's disease will become extremely overwhelmed. When that person begins to feel extremely overwhelmed they become very dysfunctional, agitated, compulsive, acutely confused, and fearful. In the end, the person will become much more disoriented to everything surrounding them, and their emotional health, physical well-being, and intellectual disability progress at a faster rate. At this stage, the person becomes very susceptible to infection and accidents and death will usually result from infection.



Therefore, if you or a love one have any of these symptoms, then it is really important that you contact your healthcare provider as soon as possible. The earlier a person receives treatment the easier it is to deal with. Understanding these signs and symptoms of Alzheimer's is extremely important for sustaining a better quality of life for everyone involved.






Alzheimer's Disease Cause

Alzheimer's Disease Cause
As much as there has not yet been any known cure for the disease, it is widely researched about and the research has so far led to the establishment of some of the main causes of the condition. Among the most possible courses of the condition are age in complement with the hereditary traits. If the family lineage has a determinate gene that significantly causes this type of disease, then it is almost certain that you will degenerate into an Alzheimer's disease patient with age.



A natural factor I age which plays a major role in the development of the disease. It is only natural that any body registers certain decline in functionality with age. As much as this is true about any body if not all animals, the case of Alzheimer's disease is however quite different. The rate at which a victim's memory degenerates as they age when they have the disease is quite alarming as compared to the usual memory related problems that affect all people in old age.



Another serious cause of Alzheimer's disease is the personal lifestyle of individuals. For people without genetic links to the disease, lifestyle may enhance their chances of developing the disorder. It has been verified that serious head injuries will most likely lead to the possibility of developing the disease as they continue to age. If you have been involved in an accident that resulted in serious head injuries, the chances are quite high that you may develop the Alzheimer's disease. This discovery should draw our attention to the risk that professional boxers are exposed to in the line of their daily duties.



When thinking about lifestyles that may influence the development of the disease, it is important to note that alcohol consumption and narcotics are sure products that can enhance an individual's chances of developing the disease in later years. This is because these are products that have a direct impact on the individual's thinking pattern even in the absence of old age or dementia. The final factor that has been confirmed to have an influence in the development of the disease is the heart diseases. It is clinically proven that the heart's strength and health plays a big influential role in the development of the disease. People with heart related complications have higher chances of developing the disease as compared to their strong hearted counterparts. This should give us the wake up call to try and take part in regular exercise and to maintain physical fitness as this automatically leads to good mental health