Alzheimers and Dementia
"Is It Alzheimer's or Is It Dementia?..."
...A woman in her early 50s was admitted to a
hospital because of increasingly odd behavior.
Her family reported that she had been showing memory problems and strong feelings of jealousy.
She also had become disoriented at home and was hiding objects.
During a doctor's examination, the woman was unable to remember her husband's name, the year, or
how long she had been at the hospital.
She could read but did not seem to understand what she read, and she stressed the words in an
unusual way. She sometimes became agitated and seemed to have hallucinations and irrational fears.
This woman, known as Auguste D., was the first person reported to have the disease now known as
Alzheimer's disease after Alois Alzheimer, the German doctor who first described it.
Plaques and Tangles
After Auguste D. died in 1906, doctors examined her brain and found that it appeared shrunken
and contained several unusual features, including strange clumps of protein called plaques and tangled fibers inside the nerve cells.
Memory impairments and other symptoms of dementia, which means "deprived of mind," had been
described in older adults since ancient times.
However, because Auguste D. began to show symptoms at a relatively early age, doctors did not
think her disease could be related to what was then called "senile dementia. "The word senile is derived from a Latin term that means, roughly,
"old age."
It is now clear that AD is a major cause of dementia in elderly people as well as in relatively
young adults. Furthermore, we know that it is only one of many disorders that can lead to dementia. The U. S. Congress Office of Technology
Assessment estimates that as many as 6.8 million people in the United States have dementia, and at least 1.8 million of those are severely
affected.
Studies in some communities have found that almost half of all people age 85 and older have some
form of dementia. Although it is common in very elderly individuals, dementia is not a normal part of the aging process. Many people live into
their 90s and even 100s without any symptoms of dementia.
Besides senile dementia, other terms often used to describe dementia include senility and
organic brain syndrome. Senility and senile dementia are outdated terms that reflect the formerly widespread belief that dementia was a normal
part of aging. Organic brain syndrome is a general term that refers to physical disorders (not psychiatric in origin) that impair mental
functions.
Research in the last 30 years has led to a greatly improved understanding of what might be a
definition of dementia, what it is, who gets it, and how it develops and affects the brain. This work is beginning to pay
off with better diagnostic techniques, improved treatments, and even potential ways of preventing these diseases.
Alzheimers and Dementia
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