![]() |
|
| *Women health>>>Alzheimer Disease |
Alzheimer's disease? |
My neighbour's wife passed away today. She suffered from Alzheimer's for about 2 years.I don't mean to seem ignorant, I knew it was incurable, but I didn't realise that one could actually die from it? Can anybody tell me how it takes a life, so I can understand better? Serious answers only please, still saddened by the news. Thanks Yes - I work with Alzheimer's patients. What happens in the Alzheimers patient is that the brain actually shrinks. So remember that really - somewhere in the brain - everything in the body is told to perform. The patient can lose their life that way OR more common is that the patient will simply FORGET how to chew and swallow like I've seen so many times. We like to think that we can only go a few days without food, but that's not true. We can go many, many days without food. But without water we waste away very quickly. These patients will forget how to swallow and chew and they simply pass because of this. Alzheimer's does more then robs memory loss. it slowly kills your brain of all functions so even the routine things your brain does controlling your breathing , beating of the heart etc, shuts down and there you have it, Death by Alzheimer's disease, a progressive brain disorder characterized by loss of memory, is usually caused by secondary infections that are common in incapacitated patients. the average length of time between diagnosis and death is eight years, although people can live with the illness 20 years or more. As the disease progresses, patients lose the ability to coordinate basic motor skills such as swallowing, walking, or controlling bladder and bowel. Difficulty swallowing can cause food to be inhaled, which can result in pneumonia. Inability to walk can lead to bedsores. Incontinence can result in bladder infections. These infections become particularly difficult to deal with because Alzheimer's patients are unable to understand and participate in their own treatment. A fall can cause a broken hip, such falls often lead to death because the patient does not have the capacity to follow directions or motivation to try to walk again. Such incapacitation again sets the stage for deadly infections. Doctors say it is possible that an Alzheimer's patient could progress to the point that damage from the disease to the centers of the brain that control breathing could cause death, but patients rarely get that far without an infection setting in. Once a patient is extremely incapacitated, there is little medical motivation to aggressively treat such infections. In the later stages of the disease, deterioration of musculature and mobility, leading to bedfastness, inability to feed oneself, and incontinence, will be seen if death from some external cause (e.g. heart attack or pneumonia) does not intervene. Once identified, the average lifespan of patients living with Alzheimer's disease is approximately 7-10 years, although cases are known where reaching the final stage occurs within 4-5 years or at the other extreme they may survive up to 21 years. I worked for a leading Professor into cause of Alzheimer's - along with treatment to 'stall or stabilise' the condition. The following link should take you directly to a page from BRACE (a fund raising organisation for people and relatives) - which will explain quite clearly about the deterioration with Alzheimer's. I hope you find it useful. Alzheimer's destroys brain cells, causing problems with memory, thinking and behavior severe enough to affect work, lifelong hobbies or social life. Alzheimer鈥檚 gets worse over time, and it is fatal. Today it is the seventh-leading cause of death in the United States. Stages and symptoms People don't die from Alzheimer's. They die of the complications often associated with it. These are things such as Pneumonia, dehydration, or simply the body shutting down |
| Tags |
| Breast Reconstruction Acupuncture AIDS Allergies Alzheimer Disease Androgen Anxiety Disorders Asthma Atherosclerosis ADHD |
Health Categories--Copyright/IP Policy--Contact Webmaster The information on whfhhc.com is provided for educational and informational purposes only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for any medical conditions. |