Showing posts with label Alzheimer's disease. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alzheimer's disease. Show all posts

Monday, 6 July 2015

The Doctor’s dementia review: ‘You live with dementia, you don’t suffer it’

Facebook is useful, and singing helps … Jennifer Bute

It takes one hell of a woman to burst out laughing at the thought of her own torturous hallucinations of ringing phones, babies crying and typewriter keys tapping. Dr Jennifer Bute is that woman. In The Doctor’s Dementia (Radio 4), Jennifer tells the no-nonsense story of what it is like to live with her condition. She was in her late 50s and working as a busy GP when she noticed she was becoming forgetful, a symptom she blamed on getting older.

But Jennifer was diagnosed with dementia – and realised her condition was deteriorating when she left her internet shopping delivery on the hob and instinctively turned on the four “twirly things”. The plastic packaging melted while she watched. “It was only when the bananas exploded that I was brought to my senses,” she says.

Although it’s unimaginably hard for Jennifer to go from lecturing “off the hoof” to batting off an attack by an imaginary swarm of bees, her refusal to become a victim is a breath of fresh air. You instinctively trust her when she says dementia is a challenge, not the end of the world or a death sentence. Yes, she’s a doctor, but she’s also speaking up for herself and many others in the same situation.

“I discovered when people found out I had dementia they avoided me,” she explains. “They don’t know what to say.” So she produced leaflets for her children and friends to help them cope. And when she realised she couldn’t find her way home, she bought a satnav.
It’s a practical approach to dementia, and a reminder that life goes on for the person involved. Little strategies go a long way. She finds Facebook useful as it involves short sentences and a picture of the person she’s interacting with, making it easier to remember who they are. Singing also helps. “It’s like a workout,” she says.



Monday, 8 June 2015

'There is still a shocking level of ignorance regarding dementia'


Our expert panel discussed the issues people with dementia face when accessing health and social care services

What are the issues that people with dementia face?

George McNamara, head of policy and public affairs, Alzheimer’s Society: Every day we hear about the struggle people with dementia have getting a timely diagnosis. While progress has been made in this area, many people with dementia are also at their wits end with the lack of timely and quality dementia care in their area.

Gill Phillips, creator of Whose Shoes? – Making It Real, a co-production tool helping people work together to improve lives: Finding the right support at the right time for people with dementia and carers. Things joining up. Avoiding hospital admissions – and if hospital is necessary, for staff (particularly non-specialist staff) to be able to understand and care for people as individual human beings.

Read more...

 

Tuesday, 26 May 2015

Daring skydive in aid of Dementia UK

Gipsey Bridge Academy pupils have been raising money for Dementia UK. Pupils L-R Rosa Abram 4, Jordan Langley 6, Cain Nicholls 7, Sophie Holland 8, Karis Greene 7, Harry Self 9, Kady Synyer 10, Grace Lunn 11 - school council, and parent Mrs Sally Elms who is going to do a skydive to raise money for Dementia UK.



A plucky parent is planning to leap 10,000ft out of a plane to raise money for a charity close to her heart.

Mum-of-two Sally Elms, of Kirton Holme, will take to the skies over Peterborough in June to support Dementia UK.

“As a Dementia friend I am trying to raise awareness of this cruel, progressive disease by doing a tandem skydive on June 20,” said Sally, 49.

“Dementia UK is a charity close to my heart after 
having my mum diagnosed 
several years ago with 
vascular dementia and also losing an uncle to Alzheimer’s just over a year ago.”

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Thursday, 22 January 2015

Can crosswords and exercise ward off dementia?

Playing chess may help combat dementia

Challenging the brain with crosswords, working out and eating healthily may help the middle-aged stave off dementia in later life, new research suggests.

The study claims making such lifestyle changes earlier in life could prevent over 80,000 cases of Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia each year.

Evidence suggests the brain may begin deteriorating when people are in their late 40s, making it even more important to take action early.


Read more....

Monday, 8 September 2014

Memory-Loss stops “Internal Clock” for those with Alzheimer’s and Dementia as they lose “sense of time”

When we can’t remember what happened in the past, we lose a “sense of time” or any expectation for the future. Even if the future is only a few minutes away.

A “sense of time” is formed by multiple memories which create an “internal clock” that tells us when it’s time to get up, go to work, have lunch or go to bed. We do all these things because we’ve formed a memory in our “internal clock.”

Most of us take our “inner clock” for granted, yet our daily schedule is regulated almost entirely by a “sense of time” created by memories.

We know what day it is because we know what happened yesterday. We know what time it is because we just woke up and know we’ll be leaving for work soon. When someone with Alzheimer’s or Dementia is unable to remember yesterday, or last night, or 5 minutes ago, he doesn’t know what day it is. And, he will not have a “sense of time” to tell him what will happen a few moments from now or hours from now.



Friday, 29 August 2014

Depression can contribute to onset of Alzheimer's disease, study finds


Rapid decline in thinking and memory skills increased when the elderly suffer from depression, study finds.


Loneliness and loss of appetite could contribute to Alzheimer's disease, scientists have warned.

In the first study to establish the relationship between depressive symptoms, such as feeling of loneliness, and dementia, experts claimed to have shown a link between depression and mild cognitive impairment (MCI).

The rapid decline in thinking and memory skills associated with MCI, which is known to contribute to Alzheimer's, are increased when the elderly suffer from depression.

Common symptoms of depression in the elderly, such as loneliness and loss of appetite, could serve as warning signs that they are at risk of MCI and Alzheimer's.

Monday, 14 July 2014

PM boosts dementia research as early onset could be three times more common than thought

Early onset dementia could be three times more common than had been thought.



Some 17,000 under-65s are recognised to suffer from it and even those in their 20s can become victims.

The figures, from the Alzheimer’s Society, come as charities say another 34,000 may have been misdiagnosed or not suspect they have dementia.

It is often confused with depression or the menopause.The warning comes as Prime Minister David Cameron announced a £100million boost for dementia research this week in partnership with ­Alzheimer’s Research UK.

Tuesday, 8 July 2014

Technology could help people with dementia remain in their homes

Voting for dementia in the Longitude Prize could help revolutionise care.
Toyota care robots


Dementia affects an increasing number of people: in 2012, 800,000 people in the UK had a form of dementia. The cost to the British economy, estimated at £23bn a year by the Alzheimer's Society, is now greater than cancer, strokes and heart disease combined. Finding a solution that can both alleviate the pressures on society and allow people with dementia to live with dignity is crucial; this is why it should win the public vote to decide the focus of the Longitude prize 2014.

Recent stories in the media about the quality of care provided to the elderly have highlighted that there is still a lack of understanding and even empathy when caring for those with dementia. The Care Quality Commission has shown that care across England is patchy at best and in need of improvement. With the NHS struggling to cope with increasing numbers of people with dementia, a greater burden is being placed on the role of family carers in providing support.

Tuesday, 24 June 2014

Secret behind why Alzheimer’s patients cannot make new memories discovered

Scientists discover molecule that stops new memories forming in people with Alzheimer's disease, raising hopes of new drugs to treat dementia.

A microscopic view showing high concentrations of the GABA neurotransmitter (red) in the reactive astrocytes (green) in a human brain with Alzheimer's disease

A drug to prevent the devastating memory loss associated with Alzheimer's disease is a step closer after scientists discovered the secret behind why people with dementia cannot form new memories.

It was previously thought that Alzheimer's was primarily caused by the build up of sticky amyloid plaques in the brain which stop neurons from firing.

But drugs to clear the plaques have so far failed to bring any improvement to sufferers.

Many scientists believe that the amyloid plaques trigger a 'cascade effect' of other symptoms meaning that by the time they are spotted it is already too late.

Researchers at Penn State University have now discovered that those plaques may be triggering overproduction of a chemical that drives memory loss by preventing a key part of the brain from functioning.

Tuesday, 10 June 2014

Sleepless nights raise brain levels of Alzheimer’s protein: study

After a night of no sleep, even a healthy brain has higher than normal levels of the protein that forms the signature tangles in Alzheimer’s disease, according to a new study from the Netherlands.

“We think normal healthy sleep helps reduce the amount of (amyloid) beta in the brain and if your sleep is disturbed this decrease is prevented,” said the study’s senior author Dr. Jurgen Claassen, from Radboud University Medical Center in Nijmegen.

In people who repeatedly fail to get a good night's sleep, the amyloid-beta concentration may build up and could be one factor in the development of Alzheimer’s disease, he said.


Prevent Alzheimer’s by vaccinating at 40, scientist suggests

A vaccine could wipe out plaques that stop the brain from signalling if given before the onset of the disease, experts say

MRI of an Alzheimer disease sufferer

Alzheimer’s Disease could be prevented by vaccinating people as young as 40, decades before any symptoms emerge, it has been suggested.

James Nicoll, professor of neuropathology at Southampton University, found that a vaccine can kick-start the immune system into action, and wipe out plaques that stop the brain from signalling.

Monday, 12 May 2014

4 No-Nonsense Solutions to the Looming Dementia Crisis

The dementia tsunami is coming, fast. We all know it, and it will affect every single one of us, either directly or through our loved ones. That we are not prepared for such an onslaught is an understatement. Dementia is an expensive disease, and if we do the maths, we can see that our current health care system and long-term care infrastructure cannot hold up to what is to come.







Wednesday, 7 May 2014

A one-two punch of chronic disease


Neuroscientist Prof. Michal Beeri has returned from a decade in New York to investigate the connection between diabetes and Alzheimer’s disease.

The world faces two major epidemics of chronic disease – diabetes, with some 350 million sufferers, and Alzheimer’s disease, with an estimated 40 million.

The prevalence of each disorder is expected to double or even triple within a few decades, threatening the income of patients’ families and the economic health of nations that will be forced to treat and care for sufferers.

But could it be that they pack a one-two punch – that one may cause the other, or at least significantly raise the risk of contracting the other? In recent years, there has been growing evidence that excessive sugar in the bloodstream increases the likelihood of the most common type of dementia decades later.

Read more....

Thursday, 9 January 2014

Bringing Dementia Patients to Life



We know a lot about Alzheimer's disease. For example, we know that it is the sixth-leading cause of death in the United States. We know that one in three seniors dies with some form of dementia. And we know that over 5 million Americans are currently living with Alzheimer's. But there are some important things we don't know—and I am not referring simply to the still-elusive cure for the disease. I am also talking about new insights familiar to experts in dementia care, which have not yet reached many of the 15 million Americans caring for a loved one with the disease. In dementia care, what we don't know can really hurt us.

I recently spoke with Theresa Klein, an occupational therapist at Augustana Emerald Crest Assisted Living in Minneapolis, who has been caring for people with dementia for 23 years. Theresa and her colleagues have known and cared for hundreds of patients, and this wealth of experience has provided insight on how to craft a better life for both patients and caregivers. First and foremost is the realization that a dementia diagnosis is not the medical equivalent of falling off a cliff. If we stay hopeful and focus on what matters most, she says, we can do a lot to help patients reach their peak every day.

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