Alzheimer’s: Mild Alzheimer’s Disease -The Earliest Stage

Early on, as the nerve cells first begin to deteriorate, AD may present no signs or symptoms at all. Even the person who has Alzheimer’s may not notice anything different at first. But as the destruction worsens, and the person moves into this early stage, changes in behavior may become more apparent. Not every person in the early phases of Alzheimer’s will experience these symptoms, but they may include:

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Alzheimer’s: Moderate Alzheimer’s

As the disease progresses and more nerve cells in more parts of the brain are affected, the person with Alzheimer’s may develop new behaviors and exhibit more personality changes. It becomes increasingly apparent to family members that something is amiss as the person’s thinking become even hazier and judgment diminishes. Here’s what may occur:

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Alzheimer’s: Severe Alzheimer’s Disease

In the final stage of Alzheimer’s Disease, the disease has eroded the person’s ability to think or reason. The most essential tasks of day-to-day living require assistance, and the person’s personality may be entirely changed. In some cases, the person may be bedridden. A weakened body puts the person at greater risk for other illnesses, which is why many people may die not of Alzheimer’s but of infections such as pneumonia. Some common changes at this stage are:

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Alzheimer’s: Other Conditions In Early Alzheimer’s Disease

Another factor that makes early Alzheimer’s Disease difficult to detect is the presence of other conditions. Often, Alzheimer’s Disease coexists with other health problems that can mimic or resemble Alzheimer’s. Many times, it’s easy to dismiss the signs of Alzheimer’s Disease as one of these other health problems or to assume the person has Alzheimer’s when it’s really one of these other conditions.

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Alzheimer’s: Separating Forgetfulness From Early Alzheimer’s Disease

It isn’t easy to distinguish the normal forgetfulness that occurs with aging from the onset of Alzheimer’s. As we get older we gradually lose brain cells, and our brain processes slow making it harder for us to recall a certain event, a name, or a telephone number at a moment’s notice. But scientists now know that these memories are not entirely lost in healthy people. They simply take more time to retrieve.

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Alzheimer’s: Vascular Dementia, Binswanger’s Disease, Dementia with Lewy Bodies, Pick’s Disease, Huntington’s Disease and Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease

OTHER TYPES OF DEMENTIA

Alzheimer’s is by no means the only form of dementia. Dementia refers to a whole category of conditions in which the brain is affected to such an extreme that the person loses basic cognitive skills such as thinking, remembering, and reasoning, and can no longer perform daily activities.

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Alzheimer’s: Making The Diagnosis

A doctor will rely on the results of all these different evaluations to determine whether you have Alzheimer’s, another form of dementia, or another condition that may causing your symptoms. If Alzheimer’s is the most likely reason for your signs and symptoms, the official diagnosis will be probable Alzheimer’s since a diagnosis cannot be confirmed until an autopsy is done. To help doctors make a diagnosis, the National Institute of Neurological and Communicative Disorders and Stroke and the Alzheimer’s Association have established certain criteria:

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Alzheimer’s: Physician’s Support

When you were younger and healthier, seeing a doctor once a year for a checkup was probably the most frequent contact you ever had with a healthcare professional, except for the occasional illness. Or maybe it was picking up a prescription from your local pharmacist. But if you think you or a loved one has Alzheimer’s, you will be seeing a lot more of the healthcare industry. And as you wrestle with the barrage of emotions that having Alzheimer’s Disease can cause, you may be asking the critical question: Who is going to take care of me?

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