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What Is Alzheimers Dementia ?

By: Ben Needles

According to the Alzheimers Foundation, Alzheimers Dementia accounts for 60-70% of all dementia cases. What makes it a form of dementia is that it impairs cognition, speech, memory and movement.

What makes Alzheimers Dementia different from other forms of dementia (like vascular, lewy body and frontotemporal) is that there isnt physical motor skill impairments directly associated with it and the causes arent well known. Dementia often surfaces as a symptom of some greater disease like Parkinsons, Huntington and Alzheimers, or it could be the byproduct of a stroke.

Alzheimers Dementia is characterized by increasing and persistent forgetfulness. These patients routinely forget names of loved ones, appointments, words to express themselves, or even entire events. Balancing the checkbook or cooking a meal suddenly becomes overwhelming.

Emotional mood swings are common, as the patient struggles to deal with confusing emotions and frustration. Unfortunately, the causes of Alzheimers are not widely understood, although visible brain effects include tau protein tangles and beta-amyloid protein plaques.

Inflammation and brain cell death are also triggered in the Alzheimers brain. The average person lives with Alzheimers Dementia for eight years before dying, so its important than caregivers and patients seek counsel on coping skills.

Lewy Body Dementia is characterized by the loss of ability to reason, think and remember. Like Alzheimers Dementia, it causes Alzheimers symptoms like confusion, memory loss, decreased awareness, delusions and depression; and like Parkinsons, it causes physical disturbances like tremors and rigidity.

Some people with Lewy Body Dementia even suffer hallucinations. The causes arent known but researchers feel its somehow linked to Alzheimers and Parkinsons and theyve noticed a common protein in patients that may be the key to preventative measures.

The good news is that not all Alzheimers Dementia symptoms are in fact a serious or fatal condition. Sometimes the symptoms appear as a result of decreased thyroid functioning, a reaction to medication or poor nutrition.

Chronic alcoholism often creates a deficiency in Vitamin B1/Thiamin, which produces signs of dementia. Niacin/B3 deficiencies and dehydration may also resemble Dementia and Alzheimers. Infections like meningitis, encephalitis or syphilis cause dementia, but can be reversed if caught in time.

A build up of spinal fluid near the brain (known as hydrocephalus) causes impaired mental functions but can be treated by draining the fluid with a tube. In other cases, emotional problems or depression can mimic dementia, which can be regulated through a combination of drugs and therapy.

Article Source: http://articleboard.findabook.com

About the Author (text)

Enrich your knowledge further about alzheimers dementia from Mike Selvon portal at alzheimercare.akainfotips.info/. We appreciate your feedback at our blog at www.mynicheportal.com/health-beauty/ where a free gift awaits you.

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