Showing posts with label alzheimer's disease prevention. Show all posts
Showing posts with label alzheimer's disease prevention. Show all posts

Thursday, July 21, 2011

'Prevention is better than cure for Alzheimer's disease

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Here is a way for nurses administrators, social workers and other health care professionals to get an easyceu or two

Here are more interesting dementia brain boosting activities



By Robert Bazell
Chief science and health correspondent

NBC News NBC News

Curing Alzheimer’s disease may be impossible and the best hope to control the disease may require beginning treatments as much as 20 years before the onset of symptoms. It could take decades to find effective therapies for the brain-wasting disease.

That is the view of Dr. Sam Gandy, a highly respected Alzheimer's expert at Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York. Writing a perspective article titled “Prevention is Better than Cure” in this week’s issue of the journal Nature, Gandy offers an argument that will likely dominate much of the discussion next week when 4,000 researchers gather in Paris for the Alzheimer’s Association’s Annual International Conference.

Gandy notes it has been more than a century since the German psychiatrist Alois Alzheimer described the condition that bears his name. Dr. Alzheimer discovered the disease in a 51-year-old woman called Auguste D. After her death, Alzheimer noticed her brain was speckled with plaques of a protein now known as amyloid-beta peptide.

In recent decades, on the basis of sound evidence, many scientists have concluded that amyloid plaques play a key role in causing the devastation of Alzheimer’s disease. The pharmaceutical industry has produced drugs and vaccines designed to clear the plaques from the brain. The problem is, in a few large studies the plaque goes away, but the symptoms of the disease continue to worsen.

One camp among Alzheimer’s researchers believes this shows that amyloid is simply not the cause. But the majority of researchers, like Gandy, believe that once the plaque appears the damage to the brain is too great to undo and the only hope is to prevent it. Recent studies using brain scans, spinal fluid and blood samples have been searching for signs that appear before the psychological tests reveal the onset of dementia. Much of this work is centered on the handful of families where some members carry a dominant gene variation that causes them to get Alzheimer’s in their 30s, 40s or 50s, but that type of screening is expected to become more common.

It is increasingly apparent from these studies that many of these changes occur as much as 20 years before the symptoms of the disease. Alzheimer's can progress at different rates but typically develops through different stages, beginning with mild cognitive impairment — forgetting familiar words or losing common objects — to difficulty performing tasks to severe dementia and the inability to carry on a conversation or control movements.

Scientists believe it might be necessary to administer amyloid-lowering drugs early in the course of the disease — long before it is anything that could be called a disease. It also seems likely that it will take years to prove whether any drugs work.

However, getting started with any course of treatment quickly is vital. By 2050, it's estimated that as many as 16 million Americans will have the disease. Most people survive about four to eight years after diagnosis, but some can live as long as 20 years with the disease, according to the Alzheimer's Association.

Gandy writes that “we should not be discouraged by the prospect of another decade or two of work” to know whether controlling amyloid is the key to controlling Alzheimer’s disease. “Prophylactic intervention,” he writes, “is now the best hope.”

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Submitting to the Science of Prevention

Wall Street Journal
By LAURA LANDRO
I've had clothes custom-tailored by a seamstress. I've had vacations custom-planned by travel agents. And now, I've received a custom-designed personal health plan from medical experts.
Recently, I joined a group of volunteers at Emory University submitting to an exhaustive -- and exhausting -- "predictive health assessment" that researchers used to determine the specific health risks I face and to prescribe changes to my behavior and lifestyle with the aim of reducing those risks.
On two separate visits, researchers measured everything from the thickness of my arteries to the density of my bones. I answered countless questions about my social functioning, my emotional health, my eating habits and the quality of my sleep. I gave up samples of blood and other bodily fluids for standard tests, like cholesterol and hemoglobin levels, and more experimental tests, such as the levels of inflammation in my body and my ability to regenerate stem cells. After developing a personal health plan based on some of the results, I agreed to be nudged on a regular basis by a health coach to make sure I was adhering to my regimen.
Emory's Center for Health Discovery and Well Being, a partnership between Emory's Predictive Health Institute and the Georgia Institute of Technology, is part of an effort to answer one of the most pressing questions for health care in the U.S.: how to reverse the growing burden of chronic disease.
Many experts believe the answer is...........read the full article

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

10 Steps to Avoid Alzheimer's

By SixWise.com
Every 71 seconds, someone develops Alzheimer's disease, according to the Alzheimer's Association's 2008 Facts and Figures. While over 5 million people in the United States are already living with the disease, it's estimated that 10 million baby boomers will develop Alzheimer's during their lifetime -- and this number is expected to triple by 2050.
.............................The Most Common Form of Dementia
Dementia is a loss or decline in memory and other cognitive abilities that is severe enough to interfere with daily life. Alzheimer's disease is the most common cause of dementia, accounting for 60 percent to 80 percent of cases............................read the whole article

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Berries 'may help Alzheimer's' and other dementias

Press Association



Compounds in black currants could reduce the risk of Alzheimer's disease and other dementias, food researchers have said.
Scientists are working on a project to find a cost-effective way of developing the compounds as.....read the whole story

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

New Lifestyle Habits to Delay Alzheimer's Disease

FitcomHealth.com
Proactive Steps you can start doing today for better mental health and preventing Alzheimer's Disease
By Phyllis Staff, Ph.D.

Argh! Where are my glasses? I put them down…to do what? And when?

As the daughter of an Alzheimer's patient, this inability to keep up with everyday items, like my glasses and car keys, drives me absolutely nuts! Absent-mindedness has always plagued me. Now, it keeps me anxious and guessing. Is this an early sign of Alzheimer's disease? Could I end up like my father, crippled with this disease? I decided to stop worrying about it and act!

I searched the latest literature to see what techniques (no prescriptions, thank you!) could prevent or delay the onset of Alzheimer's disease. Here are some of the things I found.......read more

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Grape Seed Extract Thwarts Alzheimer’s

Srop Aging Now
Healthier Longer Life Through Knowledge and Nutrition
By Gale Maleskey, MS, RD
Registered Dietitian
Grape seed extract is showing potential as a way to prevent Alzheimer’s disease and other age-related memory loss. A study by researchers at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, in New York City, found that the extract prevented the build-up of amyloid plaques, large protein molecules that interfere with brain function. Amyloid plaques are considered a hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease, but the truth is, they’re found in most older brains. People with Alzheimer’s just have more of them.

Grape seed extract is loaded with polyphenols, especially one group called....read the whole article

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Prevent Alzheimer's, boost your brain power

Here is a great dementia resource for caregivers and healthcare professinals,

Here is information on being the best caregiver you can be

Here are more interesting dementiaarticles and activities, Biloxi Mississippi

WLOX Channel 13

Every seven seconds, someone in the world is diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease or a related dementia. More than 24.3 million people in the world are currently living with these conditions.

Experts say memory loss can occur for a number of different reasons, including Alzheimer's disease, arteriosclerotic disease, vascular disease, stroke, vitamin deficiencies and thyroid deficiencies; but with early and careful evaluation, many dementia-causing conditions are treatable and sometimes even reversible.

After Alzheimer's disease the second most common form of dementia is vascular dementia, which results from blockages in the brain's blood supply and the vital oxygen and nutrients it carries....
read the whole story

Saturday, July 19, 2008

Invest in your brain to prevent Alzheimers

ABC7 Healthy Living

Program may ward off Alzheimer's disease

click on "Program may ward off Alzheimer's disease
One local neurologist says your brain works like an interest-bearing account.
when you get to this page". For some reason the link directly to it does not eork

Anyway back to the story

When Dr. Marshall Welles was born, ballpoint pens, traffic lights and washing machines did not exist.
The first television I ever saw was at the World's Fair in the 1930s," said Dr. Welles.
How does he stay so sharp and active? His neurologist, Dr. Vince Fortanasce, says it's a four-pronged plan that involves diet, exercise, accentuating the brain's reserves, and rest and relaxation. He calls it the "DEAR" Program, an anti-Alzheimer's prescription.
If you have trouble finding the whole story
email alzheimersideas@gmail.com

Friday, June 27, 2008

Dementia can hit after a stroke in prime of life

In November 2005, Davida Godett seemingly had it all. She had a great job and was on the fast track to earning her MBA. Then, on an otherwise uneventful Monday morning, Godett crashed:

She had a mini-stroke that temporarily stopped the blood flow to her brain. Godett went to a nearby emergency room and recovered. She didn't really dwell on the fact that she was at high risk for another attack. After all, she reasoned, strokes strike older people, and she was only 29. Then, right around Valentine's Day 2007, Godett started to slur her words. One side of her body felt numb. She had had a severe stroke. This time, when Godett, an accountant in Philadelphia, tried to resume her life, she ran into major problems. At work, she had trouble adding up numbers, planning ahead or even thinking clearly.FIND MORE STORIES IN: Philadelphia Medicare Alzheimer Valentine Morgantown Stroke Association

BETTER LIFE: Rounding up the latest studies on Alzheimer's and dementia

The damage from the stroke had left her with vascular dementia, the second-leading cause of dementia in the USA behind Alzheimer's. Godett was only 31 at the time. Most people who have dementia are 65 or older, but according to the Alzheimer's Association, an estimated 500,000 people ages 55 to 64 struggle with some form of dementia. Work becomes impossible

Here are somw ways to prevent dementia

VASCULAR DEMENTIA PREVENTION
African-Americans have a greater chance of suffering a stroke and developing vascular dementia, but it can happen to anyone. To reduce the risk: Keep blood pressure in check. Don't let untreated high blood pressure damage artery walls. Maintain a normal body weight. Obesity can increase the risk of diabetes, stroke and other vascular problems. Don't smoke. Cut back on foods high in saturated fat and add plenty of whole grains and fresh fruits and vegetables to your plate. Get plenty of exercise. Thirty minutes of activity on most days of the week is ideal. Take steps to reduce high blood cholesterol.

Sources: The American Heart Association and the

Alzheimer's Association

Now what do you think?




Monday, June 9, 2008

Prevention methods for Alzheimer's disease and related dementias

dementia prevention. There is much that is unknown about Alzheimer's disease and other dementias, including the cause or causes and how to slow or stop its progress. Because of this, Alzheimer's disease and related dementias are difficult to prevent.

There is some evidence that indicates that people who sustain severe head injuries are more likely to develop Alzheimer's disease later in life. For this reason, it is important to always wear a seatbelt while traveling in a car and to wear protective headgear while operating a motorcycle or bicycle, or while playing contact sports.

Other studies have shown that oxidative stress, the process of cell damage by free radicals, contributes to the risk of developing Alzheimer's disease. Oxidative stress can be prevented by consuming foods that are high in antioxidants, such as olive oil, fish and fresh fruit and vegetables. It can also be prevented by taking supplements of vitamin A, C and E, although a physician should always be consulted before starting any supplements

clicl here for the full story
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