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Norma Sherry Donating Member (9 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-27-06 01:33 PM
Original message
The Big A, as in Alzheimer's
The Big A. Alzheimer’s Disease. A dreadful looming fear that rears its ugly head every time we walk into the other room and can’t remember why or momentarily can’t recall where we left our car keys, or who the voice is on the other end of the phone. These temporary lapses of memory, thankfully, are not precursors to Alzheimer’s. We’re told they are more likely indicators that we have too much on our minds.

Memory, however, that disappears, never to return again, is another story. According to the experts “forgetting is not normal”; forgetting, however, transiently is a forgivable happenstance and not an indicator of impending doom.

Alzheimer’s disease is a slow, deliberate eating away of neurons in the brain. It is as if massive portions of the brain have been wiped away. In actuality, that is what happens. Huge chunks of the brain are decimated never to be repaired or returned. Once they’re damaged, once they’re gone, they’re gone forever. It’s why memories, particularly recent memories are non-existent in an individual with Alzheimer’s.

Alzheimer’s disease, normally associated with the more senior of our population, can actually begin as early as sixty and in some cases, more rarely, even earlier. Those moments of inappropriate language, or an awkward interjection once thought kind of cute, much like that of a precocious two-year old, becomes a source of great embarrassment to family members of an individual with Alzheimer’s.

Individuals with Alzheimer’s can often display bad behavior. Sometimes it’s saying or shouting expletives in inopportune situations or in front of company; sometimes it’s being aggressive or belligerent; sometimes it’s hearing songs or voices that aren’t present or seeing people that aren’t there. Alzheimer’s runs the gamut of discomforting experiences.

For children of parents with Alzheimer’s the gloom hangs as if a cloud of black doom. The knowledge that their parent may one day not recognize them is difficult to fathom, but it happens in many cases, but thankfully not all. Some individuals with Alzheimer’s can actually forget how to eat, or remember that they need food for substance. Their bladders betray them and so goes their dignity.

It is estimated that 5-million people in the United States have Alzheimer’s; 30-million worldwide. One physician I spoke with said matter-of-factly that “the longer we live the greater the likelihood we will get Alzheimer’s”. Scientists know that the risk of Alzheimer's nearly doubles every 5 years so by the age of 95 nearly one-half of every one lucky enough to reach the ripe old age of 95 will have Alzheimer's disease. So what is one to do?

There are many old-wives tales; we’ve all heard them: keep your mind alive, learn a new language, do crossword puzzles. But the truth is the professionals don’t know the answers. In fact, they can’t even definitively diagnose Alzheimer’s until after death and upon an autopsy. Short of that, it’s pretty much conjecture and guesswork. Educated guesswork, but guesswork none-the-less. Most clinical charts will state that the patient has dementia probably secondary to Alzheimer’s, but that’s the extent of the physician putting his or her reputation on the line.

Consulting the myriad of books on Alzheimer’s and talking with the medical experts doesn’t allay the confusion. Sadly, they don’t even seem to agree with one another. The New England Journal of Medicine in February 14, 2002, wrote that there is a suspected correlation between the intake of Folic Acid, Vitamins B-6 and B-12 and reducing the risk of Alzheimer’s. The American Academy of Neurology reportage seems to verify some wive’s tales. Precisely, stimulating activities such as board games, playing a musical instrument, exercising and gardening are all components in warding off Alzheimer’s.

But, then again, not every expert agrees.

Most of us remember the warnings that touted aluminum as the culprit that causes of Alzheimer’s. Nowadays, that notion is fairly confidently debunked. But, then again, there is still a contingency that refuses to disavow this assumption. However, more often today the new nemesis is copper and zinc. Harvard Medical School neuroscientist, Ashley Bush, also a devotee of the aluminum theory, recently uncovered links between copper, zinc, and Alzheimer's disease. He conducted a promising small clinical trial that indicated that a drug that binds metals, clioquinol, actually slows the progression of Alzheimer's.

The FDA, U.S. Public Health Service and the World Health Organization continue to support the use of amalgam for dental treatments stating “there is no evidence to show any connection between mercury-based fillings and Alzheimer's or other neurological diseases”. However, not all clinicians are in agreement. Some laboratory studies indicate mercury affects nerve cells and some of the biochemical processes involved in Alzheimer's disease. Again, a conundrum.

There are studies that propose that “People who were less active were more than three times more likely to have Alzheimer’s disease as compared to those who were more active.” There are other studies that suggest a prior head injury could play a role in getting Alzheimer’s later in life.

Scientists from Erasmus Medical Center in the Netherlands recorded the dietary habits of 5,395 men and women, who ate lots of vegetables and took Vitamins E and C, aged 55 and over who showed no signs of dementia. They concluded in their six-year study that those who consumed higher amounts of beta-carotene, vitamin C, vitamin E and vegetables remained Alzheimer’s free. (No mention, you’ll note of the aforementioned inclusion of vitamins B6, B12 and Folic Acid.)

The University of Minnesota’s Department of Neurology in a study in 2002 indicated that loss of memory was reversed in mice after administering a monoclonal antibody, BAM10. In their report they wrote, “Our results indicate that a substantial portion of memory loss in mice {in the study} is not permanent.”

One doesn’t have to be a scientist to know that (1) this is a stunning report, and (2) that it disagrees with much of what the medical profession is articulating to the families of individuals with suspected Alzheimer’s disease.

The newest and most promising study reported on January 19, 2006, comes from the authors of a study based at Case Western Reserve University's Alzheimer's Disease Center in Cleveland. This study, if further studies validate, changes all that once was thought about the origins of Alzheimer’s disease.

According to Danilo Tagle, program director of neurogenetics at the U.S. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, "It really is going against the central grain of what we know, and it actually may lead to something more promising," In short, the study’s findings indicate that prior to the amyloidal plaguing of the brain and subsequent cell deterioration that has been well documented that the mice showed evidence of cell cycling six-months be-fore any amyloid plaques showed up.

Additionally, the study indicated that these neurons had extra chromosomes, which is another sign that the cells had begun to divide. Furthermore, the activity was seen in the cortex and hippocampus regions of the brain, which are most implicated in Alzheimer's.

In the meantime, the battle and the fight rage on. Questions outnumber the answers. In the meantime, families suffer. It appears questionable if the Alzheimer victim suffers. Experts say that the brain of an Alzheimer’s patient keeps them in a state of unawareness. Perhaps this is so in the later stages, but not in the moderate or less so stages.

Unless the Alzheimer’s patient is in the last stages of the debilitating disease, there are many moments of lucidity. In those moments, however brief they may be, most individuals feel re-gretful and apologetic for their lack of memory or their personality fluctuations. One doctor I spoke with said it doesn’t matter what one says to an Alzheimer’s patient because they won’t remember it later. My personal exposure is contrary. I’ve found that many will latch on to the one word of negativity and remember it and repeat it often.

It is true that families must find a new, more tolerant, less confrontational manner of talking to one’s parent with Alzheimer’s. Many individuals with Alzheimer’s may also have a tendency to be paranoid, confused, agitated, angry, volatile, combative, and more, which makes cop-ing that much more difficult.

The biggest fear for the children of parent’s with Alzheimer’s, or suspected Alzheimer’s, is: am I destined to get Alzheimer’s? Without a doubt this question is at the crux of our fear. For the most part, one form of Alzheimer’s is more likely to be familial, the other, not so. Adding more fear to this is a recent study of twins which offers new credence to the concept of hereditary aspects. In a study of 1200 sets of twins, 392 were later diagnosed with Alzheimer’s.

The pragmatic view according to one physician who said, “It's tremendously important that people actually, while they still have a capacity to understand what's going on, sort out what's going to happen to them, and that is an inevitable progression in dementing diseases; at some point or other you will lose your understanding of reality and your legal capacity to sign a will, sign a check, to make decisions about your quality of life or whether you should have an operation, somebody else will have to do that for you.”

Clearly, Alzheimer’s is a disease many of us will have to reckon with…

@ Norma Sherry 2006


Norma Sherry is an award-winning writer/producer. She is the host of The Norma Sherry Show on WQXT-TV. She is also co-founder of Together Forever Changing, an organization designed to enlighten and encourage citizens to fight for our liberties.

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SidDithers Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-27-06 01:41 PM
Response to Original message
1. Saw this in the Toronto Star today...
http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1146088214842&call_pageid=968332188492&col=968793972154&t=TS_Home

University of Toronto researchers have discovered a substance in the brain itself that can stop Alzheimer's disease and could lead to a "clean and direct treatment" for the degenerative disorder within the next decade.

"This is the starting block of something that could be tremendous," says U of T Alzheimer's researcher Dr. Peter St George-Hyslop. "This could be the blueprint for the development of a drug to treat the disease."

Calling it one of the most promising discoveries he's seen during his three decades of work on the disease, St George-Hyslop said the discovery could help create a drug regimen to treat the disorder.

"I think what we're going to have (in the next decade) are medicines that will stop the disease from progressing and I think we will have medicines that will prevent the disease from happening," St George-Hyslop said. "This is one of the key elements that will go into that regime."

more at link.

Sid
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goclark Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-27-06 01:54 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. My aunt was taking one of the drugs..
She took Aricept for about a year.

Her memory seemed to be about 10% better but there were still those times when 20 times a day she would innocently ask, "What am I suppose to do today?"

She started getting chills sometimes and hot sometimes,like hot and cold flashes. Very frustrating for her.

She started getting DEPRESSED, just putting her head down and almost crying.
Staying in bed all day.
Tired.

All the joints were hurting, she could hardly walk.

Took her to 3 doctors and finally One Angel Dr. friend called in a frantic mode and told my uncle, " I just attended a seminar and they were talking about the various Memory Drugs..." Take Her Off Of That Medicine NOW!"

She is, after about 12 days - 70% better!

When we looked at the fine print for the side effects...they were all there as symptoms.

Be very careful.
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foreverdem Donating Member (759 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-27-06 02:09 PM
Response to Reply #2
3. Both my mother and my mother in law
have Alzheimers. Neither could take aricept. My mom ended up in the the emergency room with sky high blood pressure and my mother in law ended up with such severe stomach problems she could hardly eat. Both are taking Namenda. My mom has more lucid days with the Namenda than my mother in law. One thing is common for both: it's extremely hard to watch two women who were both once so independent and sharp reduced to what they are now.
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goclark Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-27-06 02:30 PM
Response to Reply #3
5. I read that book " 36 Hours" over and over


Trying to calm myself in order to serve my family member.

I feel your pain believe me.
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foreverdem Donating Member (759 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-27-06 02:39 PM
Response to Reply #5
6. Thanks, goclark n/t
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goclark Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-27-06 03:54 PM
Response to Reply #5
7. It is a day by day struggle for everyone it touches

My aunt does exercises and walking with a Trainer 2 days a week.

She is improving now but we worry that she will need to go back on a medication and get side effects again.

It is hard to tell when the side effects are worse than the condition.

Someone told me that some of the Meds will slow it down about 5-6 months.

Not sure what that means and would it be worth it if the patient can't walk and wants to die from depression.
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Warpy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-27-06 02:16 PM
Response to Original message
4. I explained it to my pop this way, when he was worried about his
increasing forgetfulness due to cerebral vascular insufficiency (clogged carotids):

"Forgetfulness is a sign that some process is going on that you really don't want, usually a result of a drug sensitivity of out of whack electrolytes or (in your case), reduced blood flow to the brain.

"Alzheimer's disease is when you walk out the front door to get the paper and then can't remember where you live. It's when you go to the bank and then can't remember how to turn on the car to drive home. It's when you wake up in the morning and can't remember how to put your trousers on if you've left them inside out and next to the bed."


I'll give that explanation to you all, quotes and all, to elderly relatives who are a little forgetful and terrified it's a sign of early Alzheimer's. Generally, it's not. However, they do need to be checked out by their doctors to rule out treatable conditions.
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