Lack Of Deep Sleep May Set The Stage For Alzheimer's NPR There's growing evidence that a lack of sleep can leave the brain vulnerable to Alzheimer's disease. "Changes in sleep habits may actually be setting the stage" for dementia, says Jeffrey Iliff, a brain scientist at Oregon Health & Science University ... |
Month: January 2016
Alzheimer’s group offers workshop Jan. 8 – Port Huron Times Herald
Port Huron Times Herald | Alzheimer's group offers workshop Jan. 8 Port Huron Times Herald The Dementia and Alzheimer's Resource Committee of St. Clair County has a new major player in its corner as part of ongoing efforts to promote research and awareness about the disease. The committee announced a partnership with University of Michigan ... Early Alzheimer's? Cheers to life |
New Year’s Resolutions for Preventing Dementia
It’s never too late to do something good for your brain. With a new year beginning and lots to cram in, you may experience a level of productivity you haven’t had the past year. So why quit just when you hit your stride? Continue the momentum and add some things on your list to start in just a few short weeks:
1. Take a class: You can renew an old interest or take up a new interest altogether. Many programs are available for all the people who are wanting to do new things in the new year – take advantage of what’s available and try your hand at something you’ve wanted to do for awhile. Or, just go on a whim and see what you like. Your brain will thank you for it.
2. Beat the winter blues: There isn’t a whole lot you can do to make the sun shine in the winter – unless you want to get a sun lamp and try to trick your body into believing it’s exposed to the “sun” (and spend extra money) – but you can achieve the same effect by exercising. Physical exercise can activate hormones that keep depression at bay, and a happy brain is a healthy brain.
3. Read more: Can’t go outside because it’s too cold? Can’t exercise also because it’s cold? Then stimulate your brain by actively engaging it. Reading will make the brain work harder to process information because of the imagination involved. Watching television programs just puts your brain in the passenger seat because all the images are there without the brain having to do anything. Try reading your favourite book to dig up fond memories or read something entirely different and new to create new pathways for your brain. If you fall asleep, then at least your brain had a good workout before sleeping, and the sleep will be rewarding in its own way.
Early dementia dramatically changes lives of Janesville couple – Gazettextra
Gazettextra | Early dementia dramatically changes lives of Janesville couple Gazettextra Director Edie Baran has written a show, "You Must Remember This," based on the stories of local people who have loved ones with dementia or alzheimer's. One of the stories is about Bruce and Diane Riley of Janesville. Diane was diagnosed with a rare ... |
New grant funds initiative to aid people who care for Alzheimer’s patients – Buffalo News
New grant funds initiative to aid people who care for Alzheimer's patients Buffalo News Catholic Charities is one of nine groups statewide with similar five-year grants to improve support for family members who care for the nearly 380,000 New Yorkers living with Alzheimer's disease and other dementia, including 55,000 in Western New York. |
Program Aimed at Assisting People with Autism, Alzheimer’s, and Dementia – WABI
WABI | Program Aimed at Assisting People with Autism, Alzheimer's, and Dementia WABI Public safety officials say it's common for people with certain mental conditions to wander off from time to time. Police in Central Maine have a new way to help find them. Augusta Police rolled-out a new info gathering program aimed at helping them ... |
Why people with dementia in Newcastle still need love and support – ChronicleLive
ChronicleLive | Why people with dementia in Newcastle still need love and support ChronicleLive New research by Alzheimer's Society shows that 44% of people in the North East mistakenly think that once a person with dementia stops recognising loved ones, they don't benefit that much from spending time with them. In a separate survey of 300 people ... Dementia sufferers need company of loved ones - charity Families of dementia sufferers urged to keep involving their loved one in get ... 'Visit dementia sufferers', West loved ones urged |
Miracle jab to stop Alzheimer’s: Wonder vaccine may hold key to halting disease – Express.co.uk
Express.co.uk | Miracle jab to stop Alzheimer's: Wonder vaccine may hold key to halting disease Express.co.uk Professor Roy Jones, director of RICE, said: “This is very important. It opens the way to a completely different and hopefully much more effective vaccine.” Alzheimer's is the most common cause of dementia, playing havoc with memory, thinking and ... Hope for Alzheimer's sufferers as first ever vaccine 'removes tangles in the ... Call for care for Alzheimer's patients Clinical trial looks at potential vaccine for Alzheimer's disease |