Dementia helps Utah caregivers ‘understand what’s important’ – Salt Lake Tribune


Dementia helps Utah caregivers 'understand what's important'
Salt Lake Tribune
The book shows patients and families "they are not alone in the feelings and challenges they face" and that "there can be high quality of life throughout the illness," Norman Foster, director of the U.'s Center for Alzheimer's Care, Imaging and ...

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Dementia in prisons a growing health issue – Nursing Careers Allied Health


Dementia in prisons a growing health issue
Nursing Careers Allied Health
As reported in the South Coast Register, chief executive officer of Alzheimer's Australia NSW John Watkins said prison authorities needed to act now to ensure appropriate care for people in prison with dementia. “Just as people in prison are treated ...
Dane County dementia patient transition team seen as modelMilwaukee Journal Sentinel

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Utah addict: Caring for grandfather with dementia ‘saved my life’ – Salt Lake Tribune


Utah addict: Caring for grandfather with dementia 'saved my life'
Salt Lake Tribune
The book shows patients and families "they are not alone in the feelings and challenges they face" and that "there can be high quality of life throughout the illness," Norman Foster, director of the U.'s Center for Alzheimer's Care, Imaging and ...

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Dane County dementia patient transition team seen as model – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel


Dane County dementia patient transition team seen as model
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Keeping dementia patients in community settings is increasingly important after the state Supreme Court ruled that people with Alzheimer's can't be involuntarily detained under a mental health statute. © 2014, Journal Sentinel Inc. All rights reserved.

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Dane County dementia program could expand statewide – Madison.com


Dane County dementia program could expand statewide
Madison.com
As part of the overhaul, the state health department is talking with the Madison-based Alzheimer's and Dementia Alliance of Wisconsin, part of the county's Dementia Support Team, about expanding the team's model to other parts of the state. The goal is ...

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Second Kane dementia unit ready in Scott – Pittsburgh Post-Gazette


Second Kane dementia unit ready in Scott
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Dennis Biondo, executive director of the four Kane Regional Centers, said the new unit was designed to respond to what he described as a growing need: nursing care for senior citizens with Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia. "We're not the ...

How dementia is changing me: My battle with an ever-shifting identity – The Independent


The Independent

How dementia is changing me: My battle with an ever-shifting identity
The Independent
For my 61st birthday, in 2010, I was given the diagnosis of microvascular disease, after Alzheimer's, the second leading cause of dementia. I was – as my rather blunt neurologist put it – already “dementing”. Insofar as I had thought about dementia ...
Alzheimer's disease could be as much about lifestyle as agingJournal Times
LeBlanc: Are you prepared for the possibility of alzheimer's?Hernando Today

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Alzheimer’s disease could be as much about lifestyle as aging – Wisconsin State Journal


The Independent

Alzheimer's disease could be as much about lifestyle as aging
Wisconsin State Journal
It's part of an effort by the Alzheimer's and Dementia Alliance of Wisconsin to make Dane County more dementia-friendly. Watertown, in Dodge and Jefferson counties, launched a similar initiative last year. For details: Call Joy Schmidt at 608-232-3400 ...
How dementia is changing me: My battle with an ever-shifting identityThe Independent

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Ethnicity and Alzheimer’s Disease

It is worth discussing the higher or lower risks of developing certain forms of dementia as part of a larger conversation involving genetically inherited diseases. The accepted conclusion is that the earliest origins of AD can be traced back to Volga German ancestry. However, AD has been found in every ethnic group that has been systematically studied, which has included West Europeans (not just Germans), Japanese, Mexicans, Hispanics (especially with stronger continental Spanish/West European blood ties), and Ashkenazic Jews (about 80% of Jews are Ashkenazic, the rest of Sephardic, which is more Iberian peninsula-origin).

Current studies are examining which genes are more likely responsible by ethnic group. In other words, even though every ethnic group can be susceptible to Alzheimer’s disease, the reason may not be the same across all groups. For most, it is the apoE-4 gene. In this case, Caucasians had a stronger apoE-4 gene-related reason for developing AD than those of African descent. Japanese-descent subjects had an even stronger association than Caucasians. This doesn’t mean all other ethnic groups are off the hook because there are variations of this apoE-4 gene (such as E2 and E3) that could be equivalent (or greater) culprits for specific groups, such as African- or Hispanic-descent.

What does this all mean? It means that for those interested in genetic testing to predict the likelihood of developing AD, it may not be worth the money for incomplete or possibly misleading results. So far, the most understood gene is the apoE-4 gene, but even that isn’t without its mysteries. That means for someone to test “clear” on the apoE-4 gene doesn’t mean there is no risk for AD because perhaps one of those mysterious parts of E4 were not yet understood or it was another E-variation that hasn’t been discovered at all. Better safe than sorry and focus on the preventable factors in the meantime.

Apathy unproven as early warning sign of dementia – NHS Choices


Telegraph.co.uk

Apathy unproven as early warning sign of dementia
NHS Choices
“Elderly who lose interest in pastimes could be at risk of Alzheimer's,” reports The Daily Telegraph, with other papers reporting similar headlines. These incorrect headlines are based on the results of a study that looked for a link between symptoms ...
Elderly who lose interest in pastimes could be at risk of Alzheimer's DiseaseTelegraph.co.uk
Apathy in Seniors Could Be a Sign of a Shrinking Brain, Says New StudyHealthline

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