Allentown Morning Call | LVH to open new center for dementia and Alzheimer's patients Allentown Morning Call LVHN said in a news release that the center centralizes clinical, educational and support services, describing it as "a hub for a coordinated community network that will support the unique and often changing needs of people with dementia, their ... |
Month: September 2015
Alzheimer’s Research And Preventing Dementia – WFAE
Ledger Gazette | Alzheimer's Research And Preventing Dementia WFAE As we age, some of us experience memory lapses but others face Alzheimer's disease or dementia. We still don't know much about the causes of Alzheimer's or have any promising treatments but doctors and researchers are learning more about how to delay ... Dementia and Alzheimer's are different? |
Police search for missing man with Alzheimer’s, dementia – WNEM Saginaw
WNEM Saginaw | Police search for missing man with Alzheimer's, dementia WNEM Saginaw Fackler suffers from Alzheimer's and dementia, police said. He left a residence in Mayville in a dark blue 2006 Chevrolet Silverado Pickup Truck with a license plate BYL 6796. A resident saw Fackler's pickup truck on the shoulder of I-75 in Clarkston ... Mayville Man with Dementia Missing Officials looking for missing Mayville man |
Alzheimer Dementia and Sleep Disorders: Issues in Diagnosis and Treatment – Psychiatric Times
Psychiatric Times | Alzheimer Dementia and Sleep Disorders: Issues in Diagnosis and Treatment Psychiatric Times Sleep disorders occur with nearly all dementias. However, some disorders have been associated with higher rates of parasomnias and dyssomnias. In one large-scale study, nocturnal sleep disorders were found in 26.6% of patients with Alzheimer disease ... |
Alzheimer’s dementia cases expected to increase in number – San Francisco Chronicle (subscription)
San Francisco Chronicle (subscription) | Alzheimer's dementia cases expected to increase in number San Francisco Chronicle (subscription) FILE - In this Nov. 9, 2014, file photo, Kathy Ridl, left, a Princeton, N.J., whose mother and grandmother died from Alzheimer's disease, Dotty Westgate, center, and a woman whose husband died from Alzheimer's disease, Peggy KempHenry, right, listen to ... |
Dementia and Alzheimer’s Disease Are Not the Same – Guardian Liberty Voice
Guardian Liberty Voice | Dementia and Alzheimer's Disease Are Not the Same Guardian Liberty Voice A common misconception is that Alzheimer's disease and dementia are the same illness. Medical News Today (MNT) explains that Alzheimer's is a disease that causes the brain to forget how to make the body function until the organs shut down. By contrast ... You can help the doctor's Alzheimer's diagnosis Alzheimer's Q&A: What emotions will patients experience during first few weeks ... Low vitamin D, memory loss tied |
Aging Matters: Hospice to offer webinar on Alzheimer’s disease, dementia – Winston-Salem Journal
Aging Matters: Hospice to offer webinar on Alzheimer's disease, dementia Winston-Salem Journal A free webinar on “The Longest Loss: Alzheimer's Disease and Dementia” will be held from 1:15 to 4:30 p.m. Thursday at the Williams Education and Counseling Center Building on the Hospice and Palliative CareCenter campus, 101 Hospice Lane. |
Drug Combination Reduces Agitation in Alzheimer’s Patients – Voice of America
Voice of America | Drug Combination Reduces Agitation in Alzheimer's Patients Voice of America Dementia is a collective name for a progressive, degenerative disease that affects memory, thinking, behavior and emotion. It can involve personality and mood changes. And frequently, those with dementia or Alzheimer's, its most common form, get ... |
Emotional Signs of Dementia Onset
Almost everyone associates forgetfulness and reverting to old memories as sure signs of dementia onset, but it is often possible the dementia is already “set in” by the time these symptoms appear. Much like heart attacks, there are signs beforehand that seem unrelated that could be very telling when dementia may be coming on.
As the brain begins to change, it affects more than just our memory – it can also change our moods and our ways of thinking and interpreting events. When someone who is usually easygoing starts to become uncharacteristically chronically irritated, something is sure to be happening in the brain. Alternatively, someone who has been cheerful throughout life seems to become increasingly depressed (especially with no obvious external source, such as grieving over recent losses), the brain is not acting “normally” in comparison with what has been historically natural for that person. It may not turn out to be dementia, but any major mood changes that seem to be inexplicable is cause for examining cerebral changes.
Perhaps it could be something as simple and easily correctable as a nutrient deficiency. But how long has the deficiency been going on and is there sufficient time and resources to compensate for that deficiency? Or perhaps it could be plaque or tumorous cells that don’t belong in the brain and could require surgery. Whatever the underlying cause may be, mood changes are easily detectible and should be taken seriously as symptoms of a possibly bigger problem.
Alzheimer’s dementia cases expected to increase in number – Washington Times
Alzheimer's dementia cases expected to increase in number Washington Times “I would describe it as a progressive disease that starts with short-term memory loss and advances to losing the ability to care for themself,” said Erin Weaver, social worker in the Alzheimer's and related dementia unit at Homewood at Martinsburg who ... |