DEMENTIA AND ALZHEIMER Dementia is a type of brain disorder that performs daily activities and communication. Alzheimer’s disease is a type of dementia that affects memory, language, and thought. A progressive mental deterioration that can occur in middle or old age, due to generalized degeneration of the brain. Dealing with Alzheimer’s can be frustrating but there will always be a way to keep yourself from the severe phase. People who have Alzheimer's disease often need help with their normal daily routine such as bathing, dressing, eating and using the bathroom. As a Caregiver or Care Partner being patient and compassionate is the key. Also having a good communication with a person with Alzheimer's requires patience, understanding and good
Dementia is caused by loss of brain cells, and shrinkage of brain tissue. This damage leads to increased challenges the brain cells now have to overcome. Neural pathways are the ways our brain cells communicates with one another, so dementia interrupts and negatively affects this process.
Dementia is defined as a chronic or persistent disorder of the mental processes caused by brain disease or injury and marked by memory disorders, personality changes, and impaired reasoning. However, what most of us do not know is that dementia is a general disorder that has a few subcategories. Those categories include Alzheimer’s disease, vascular dementia and frontal-temporal dementia, to name a few. Although statistically dementia is experienced at a similar rate amongst Japanese-Americans and caucasian Americans, their rates in the subtypes are different. Japanese-American’s, most typically Japanese-American men, experience a higher rate in vascular dementia. Vascular dementia is attributed by a lack of blood supply to the brain. Although Japanese-Americans experience vascular dementia at a higher rate than others, the reasoning behind that is still unexplained.
Dementia is a cognitive disorder that is not commonly vocalized to the public and generally does not have much awareness surrounding it. Considering the fact that if all of the people in the world diagnosed with dementia lived in one place, the population would be greater than the population of Canada. Like it was stated in the video Dementia, The Unspooling Mind, this disorder is sought to be an epidemic because it comes on with no warning and no treatment. Loved ones and family members will be diagnosed without and warning signs or reasons why. After the loved one is diagnosed, that is when life will turn upside down for both the patient and the family. Many people choose to not talk or deal with this topic as well because when it is done so, there is more times than not, a negative stigma that is surrounded by this disease.
The most severe of all the types of dementia is the Alzheimer’s disease between 60% to 80% of people with dementia has the Alzheimer’s disease. Therefore, a lot of people think dementia and Alzheimer’s are the same, but Alzheimer’s is a type of dementia. The care of patients with Alzheimer’s disease is mostly by their family members or spouse. A lot of people with Alzheimer’s disease are also taken to the nursing home or assisted living because their needs become much for their family members to handle. According to an article on caregivers taking care of Alzheimer’s patients, they said taking care of patients with Alzheimer’s disease are more demanding than taking care of a patient without it(Pilgrim,2018). I have had a personal experience with taking care of Alzheimer’s patients. I used to work in an assisted living, the dementia department to be précised. It was really demanding because I constantly must be on my feet. For example, giving them a shower, changing them, feeding them and sometimes they can ask you the same question for over hundred times. Sometimes they refuse care because they are not good with remembering faces or names. It was a
Dementia is not exactly a disease, but rather a large group of symptoms. These symptoms all relate to the decline of memory and thinking skills due to damage of the brain. Memory loss is often confused with dementia, but other symptoms must be present for a dementia diagnosis. Dementia patients suffer from a combination of cognitive, behavioral and psychological symptoms.
Dementia is a group of conditions characterized by impairment of at least two brain functions, such as memory loss and judgment. Alzheimer’s is a progressive disease that destroys memory and other important mental functions. Dementia and Alzheimer’s patients struggle with activities of daily living, such as maintaining a schedule or managing money, managing medications these may be risk for people who live alone or may have to take medication without a provider, driving, preparing food, they may struggle with the simplest things, but, as a family member or provider we can help patients with dementia and Alzheimer’s by having them always do simple things, make them feel that they still can do anything, keep a sense of structure and familiarity, keep consistent daily times for activities such as waking up, mealtimes, bathing, dressing, receiving visitors, and bedtime, try to not move things that they are familiar with.
Alzheimer’s is a mental disease that progressively deteriorates the maturity of your mentality. In being diagnosed with Alzheimer’s life may become burdensome due to the associated symptoms. Associated with this disease are the many signs of dementia that interfere with the regularity of life. Due to the cognitive, behavioral, and psychological effects of dementia, those affected usually take a turn for the worst. The simplicity of life may no longer be evident, but patient education is available to those diagnosed.
Alzheimer’s disease, one type of dementia, is a degenerative disorder of the brain that is slowly progressive. Eventually this disease will result in abnormal brain function that will lead to death. Alzheimer’s is not a normal part of the aging process; symptoms lead to a loss of mental abilities and skills, including the ability of taking care of themselves. Though it is very rare, some people do develop this disease as young as the age of forty. However, the most common age to develop this disease is over the age of sixty-five. Although changes in the brain are similar in different people, the psychological and behavioral symptoms that present may differ from person to person.
People who suffer from dementia disease experiences many challenges as their disease progress, their mental and physical abilities are declining they often rely on someone else to care for them. Often time the caregiver is the spouse who spend 35 hours a week caring for the person who has dementia. The caregiver can face many challenges caring for the person. This paper will explore the effects when caring for a spouse with dementia. The three main effects are : psychological effects, physical issues and financial effects
The data was collected from the CASCADE (the Choices, Attitudes, and Strategies for Care of Advanced Dementia at the End-of-Life) database and National Institutes of Health to locate dementia patients this was the fastest way to reach and contact a cohort of patients. The health history of the cohort was gathered from patients’ medical charts and from health care providers in nursing homes to save time from reassessing the patients. The regular physical examination of the patients was scheduled every 3 months for up to 18 months to evaluate health status, clinical complications, distressing symptoms, and burdensome interventions. These visits helped the researchers to record the progression of the disease. Also, a cognitive examination with the Test for Severe Impairment had been done for each patient.
“Every four seconds someone is diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease (Yu Jun, 2014).” Alzheimer’s is the most common form of dementia affecting about four billion people worldwide. The disease is irreversible and there are no known cures for it at the moment. Alzheimer’s disease is often slow and involves subtle changes (Quadagno, 2014). I will go through what Alzheimer’s is, who Alzheimer’s affects, and cures for Alzheimer’s.
Dementia is a general term for the decline in mental ability, severe enough to interfere with daily life. It is not a specific disease, but an overall term that describes a wide range of symptoms. Alzheimers has become the most common form of dementia. This being said, just because people suffer with memory loss does not mean they suffer from Alzheimers.
It is already established that late-life depression is associated with increased risk of dementia, but the temporal relationship between depression and development of
I think Alzheimer's Disease is a brain disease that causes a person to lose their memory. They lose their memory gradually over a period of years. They become at risk for getting lost due to losing memory of their surroundings. The family of a person that suffers from AD has a very difficult time. It is hard to see the one you love and that person no longer remembers who you are. A person with AD must have constant care to keep them safe and cared for.
Alzheimer’s Disease is defined as an “age-related, non reversible brain disorder that develops over a period of years” (NINDS). Typically, patients suffering from Alzheimer’s, have constant difficulties with making decisions, holding conversations, remembering the date, or remembering the placement of items (ALZ). As the disease progresses, patients can experience complications with reading or writing, experience personality changes, and have difficulty recognizing family members and friends (ALZ). Diagnosing people with Alzheimer’s disease is difficult because, there is not one specific test that provides a definitive answer. Instead, physicians conduct other physical examinations to exclude other potential causes of memory loss. Some of these