Alzheimer's Disease



Alzheimer's disease is one of the diseases which present a picture called "dementia" which includes confusion, memory loss and possible personality change. It is a progressive, irreversible disease which attacks brain cells and kills them. It accounts for 68% of all dementia cases.

As brain cells die, the substance of the brain shrinks or "atrophies". Abnormal material called "tangles" builds up in the centre of the brain cells and plaques outside the brain cells, disrupting messages within the brain and preventing the memory, for example, from recalling information. Memory of recent events is the first to be affected, but as the disease spreads, long-term memory is also lost. The disease also affects many of the brain's other functions and consequently, many other aspects of behaviour are disturbed.

In its early phases, the symptoms can be subtle, like vagueness, taking longer to do routine tasks, losing the point of a conversation or repeating oneself. As the disease progresses, the changes become more dramatic until, in the last stages, the person may need constant nursing care.

WHAT ARE THE SYMPTOMS?

Symptoms vary and the disease progresses at a different pace according to the individual and the areas of the brain affected. A person's abilities may fluctuate in severity from day to day or even within the one day, becoming worse in times of stress, fatigue, ill-health etc. However, there is always a deterioration over time.

The early stages are not immediately obvious and may be dismissed as "just a passing" phase. You may notice:

IS ALZHEIMER'S THE SAME AS BEING FORGETFUL?

WHO GETS ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE?



Alzheimer's Outreach http://alzheimers.zarcrom.com

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