A Mediterranean Diet Plan May Well Lead To Less Chance Of Alzheimers
June 22, 2010 by Kirsten Whittaker
Filed under Alzheimer's Disease
If you’re consuming a Mediterranean style diet, in plant foods and monounsaturated fats, you may possibly be lowering your threat of mental decline and it may also stop Alzheimer’s taking hold.
Special Care For Alzheimer’s Disease Patients
May 28, 2010 by Laurence U. Storey
Filed under Alzheimer's Disease
A young child recently remarked to his grandfather “Papa people are born; they get old, sick and die. Life is just like that. It’s sad but true. Life is just like that. And there is nothing you can do about it.” The question to Papa was where did that little fellow come up with such insight and wisdom? Every person’s life has its own end, specifically when one was forcibly hindered to perform daily task by disease or is often the case in a multifactoral model by any number of sets of different and even distinct diseases. Sadly often a Majority of the individuals afflicted by disease states often feel hopeless and useless as they can not participate in the society, including financial and emotional contribution to the family. The affliction of the sufferer increases when their environment failed to accept who they are including their relatives.
What Causes Alzheimer’s?
April 29, 2010 by Christian Goodman
Filed under Alzheimer's Disease
Scientists find it very difficult to find the grounds of the devastating Alzheimer’s disease. But they have listed down general features of the disease after researching. Many people tend to misunderstand this disease and they do not clearly think about it. Alzheimer’s disease is most generally pictured to be had by old people as loss of memories and relationships they hold.
What Are Strokes And Dementia?
April 19, 2010 by Christian Goodman
Filed under Alzheimer's Disease
Reasons that cause Dementia are both curable and permanent and depending upon this the disease can be treated.Dementia can create a mental picture about the ones suffering from the Alzheimer’s disease who find it very difficult to remember things and their close relationships and thereby causing character collapse leading to an outburst of fury and irritations.
MSG’s Effects on the Body
January 28, 2010 by Christian Goodman
Filed under Alzheimer's Disease
In a recent television show which I was watching a man went to a Chinese restaurant and asked the waiter “Does your food contain MSG?” In turn the waiter asked “Do you want MSG?” The man said no and the waiter responded we never had MSG and will never have too.
Alzheimer’s Disease The Role Of Family & Friends
January 21, 2010 by Buddy U. McLellan
Filed under Alzheimer's Disease
It can be said that the hardest part for the suffering of family and friends of Alzheimer’s disease patients is to watch their loved one’s deteriorate. In the case of one wife it was to have her husband shriek at her, obviously referring to his World War experiences “Cannot you see the bodies” in the trench. To another it was to decide to tell their father only one time that his wife had passed on. To explain the event and circumstances to him any more than one time would, they decided be cruel. After all, their father had no long term, only short term memory. Each and every time they explained to him as to where “Be mother” “the answer that seemed to suffice to their father, who after all in a progressively deteriorating state of his Alzheimer’s was that “Mother is out shopping” or “At the store with the caregiver”. Such are the events and lives not only of the ill person but also family and close friends who live with the specter of this illness of the aged.
Ayurvedic Herbs For Alzheimer’s
January 5, 2010 by Nicole Kerala
Filed under Alzheimer's Disease
Ayurveda provides an ancient system for healing that applies to many current health issues, including Alzheimer’s. Alzheimer’s is a condition that progressively affects the brain and is more and more common among elderly people. Ayurvedic herbs have become more prevalent as a natural way to approach this condition.
Alzheimer’s Patients and Home Care Services
December 24, 2009 by Jen Parsens
Filed under Alzheimer's Disease
Though it is not something that you want to consider, the truth is that it can happen to someone you love. Alzheimer’s disease, on average, affects about 5 million Americans, which means that the chances of it happening to your parents or grandparents is rather high. However, contrary to popular belief, it is not something that only occurs when you’ve reached a certain age.
Learning From Alzheimers
November 29, 2009 by Charly Smithy
Filed under Alzheimer's Disease
Alzheimer’s disease involves the gradual destruction of brain cells and this eventually results in sufferers losing their memory and thinking ability. Being a progressive disease, the patients will experience personality changes and will do less and less as it progresses. In the final stages of the disease, the victims are helpless, usually bedridden and cannot even feed or speak.
How The Problem Of Hypertension And Alzheimer’s Is Interrelated
November 22, 2009 by Scott Davis
Filed under Alzheimer's Disease
It’s stunning but it’s true. The American Heart Association reports that 73 million, that is one third of adult Americans suffer from hypertension. Two million children and teenagers are also affected by high blood pressure. High blood pressure is said to have occurred when blood flows through arteries with higher than normal force. Genetic inheritance, high salt consumption or thickenings of arterial walls are the major reasons behind this.






