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Alzheimer's Disease - Dementia
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Lifestyle ChangesAn Ounce of Prevention ... Read our selected articles and reduce your chances of Alzheimer's Disease.
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Online AlertsSave Time. Stay updated weekly/monthly. Stay updated Weekly by viewing our Free InfoMedSearch Weekly Featured Articles section. Sign up for our Monthly Alerts Newsletter and have access to our Weekly Featured Articles also (link available in each Alert notification).Alzheimer's Disease - DementiaNIH - Medical Encyclopedia Alzheimer's Disease "Alzheimer's disease (AD), one form of dementia, is a progressive, degenerative brain disease. It affects memory, thinking, and behavior. Memory impairment is a necessary feature for the diagnosis of this or any type of dementia. Change in one of the following areas must also be present: language, decision-making ability, judgment, attention, and other areas of mental function and personality. The rate of progression is different for each person. If AD develops rapidly, it is likely to continue to progress rapidly. If it has been slow to progress, it will likely continue on a slow course. There are two types of AD -- early onset and late onset. In early onset AD, symptoms first appear before age 60. Early onset AD is much less common, accounting for only 5-10% of cases. However, it tends to progress rapidly. The brain tissue shows "neurofibrillary tangles" (twisted fragments of protein within nerve cells that clog up the cell), "neuritic plaques" (abnormal clusters of dead and dying nerve cells, other brain cells, and protein), and "senile plaques" (areas where products of dying nerve cells have accumulated around protein). Although these changes occur to some extent in all brains with age, there are many more of them in the brains of people with AD." Highlighted Articles
Education and Alzheimer disease without dementia: support for the cognitive reserve hypothesis. (Neurology. 2007) "CONCLUSIONS: Regardless of the neuropathologic criteria used, education is predictive of dementia status among individuals with neuropathologic Alzheimer disease. These results support the theory that individuals with greater cognitive reserve, as reflected in years of education, are better able to cope with AD brain pathology without observable deficits in cognition." Nutritional factors, cognitive decline, and dementia. (Brain Res Bull. 2006) "Nutritional factors and nutritional deficiencies have been repeatedly associated with cognitive impairment. … Deficiencies of several B vitamins have been associated with cognitive dysfunction in many observational studies. More recently, deficiencies of folate (B(9)) and cobalamine (B(12)) have been studied in relation to hyperhomocysteinemia as potential determinants of cognitive impairment, dementia, and Alzheimer's disease (AD). A small number of studies assessed the association between intake of macronutrients and cognitive function or dementia. Among the others, the intake of fatty acids and cholesterol has received particular attention. Although the results are not always consistent, most studies have reported a protective role of dietary intakes of poly- and mono-unsaturated fatty acids against cognitive decline and AD." Exercise Is Associated with Reduced Risk for Incident Dementia among Persons 65 Years of Age and Older (Annals of Internal Medicine 2006) "Conclusion: These results suggest that regular exercise is associated with a delay in onset of dementia and Alzheimer disease, further supporting its value for elderly persons." Continue your InfoMedSearch research with our previous InfoMedLinks. Start with InfoMedLinks 2011. Searching for more specific information related to your condition? InfoMedSearch researchers can search and provide you with a custom report. We can also keep you updated. Great Price! Check out our Search Services page. Use our experience to find the important medical information you need. Help protect you and your family's health.
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NotesThe 2012 Treatment Guidelines section will contain the most recent published guidelines. |
Alzheimer's Disease - DementiaDaily Treatment ReportCognitive Therapy-CBT-PsychotherapyDevice Therapy
Drug Side-Effects and InteractionsRisk of Mortality Among Individual Antipsychotics in Patients With Dementia; (American Journal of Psychiatry (Oct 2011)) DrugsCochrane review on ‘Statins for the treatment of dementia’† (International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry 2012) ExercisePhysical Training Improves Motor Performance in People with Dementia: A Randomized Controlled Trial (Journal of the American Geriatrics Society 2012) General InformationGuidelines for the Management of Cognitive and Behavioral Problems in Dementia (J Am Board Fam Med 2012) Non-Pharmacological Intervention for Memory Decline (Front Hum Neurosci. 2012) Systematic Review of the Effectiveness of Pharmacologic Interventions to Improve Quality of Life and Well-being in People With Dementia. (Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2012) "We found no consistent evidence that any drug improves quality of life in people with dementia. We recommend that all dementia trials should include quality of life as an outcome, as this is important to patients, and cannot be presumed from improvements in cognition or other symptomatic outcomes, especially if the latter are small." GuidelinesNGC - Management of Alzheimer's Disease and Related Dementias (2012) Immunotherapy
Internet SitesTreatment Information Drug-Food-Supplement Information DrugDigest (drug interactions) FDA - Drug Interactions: What You Should Know NIH - Botanical Dietary Supplements: Background Information NIH - Drug, Supplements, and Herbal Information NIH - Herbal Supplements: Consider Safety, Too NIH - Vitamin and Mineral Supplement Fact Sheets NutritionOtherOther Treatments Experimental Radiotherapy
Supplements-Vitamins-CAMUCLA scientists pinpoint how vitamin D may help clear amyloid plaques found in Alzheimer's The Beneficial Role of Vitamin D in Alzheimer's Disease (American Journal of Alzheimer's Disease and Other Dementias 2012) Surgery
Transplantation
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