Diagnosing Alzheimer’s Disease

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  • čas přidán 6. 09. 2024
  • Dr. Georges Naasan explores the principal clinical syndromes of Alzheimer's Disease: memory, visual, language and frontal/executive. He also discusses neuropathology, genetic factors and modern biomarkers with colleagues from the UCSF Memory and Aging Center. Recorded on 04/30/2019. [8/2019] [Show ID: 34775]
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Komentáře • 567

  • @uctv
    @uctv  Před 6 měsíci

    Check out "Healthy Longevity: A Geriatrician's Perspective" here: czcams.com/video/L1fF06kheP4/video.html

  • @richardwallinger1683
    @richardwallinger1683 Před 2 lety +67

    I am loosing my wife she is 73 years old and I am on a steep learning curve .Not easy . this video is excellent .Loads of info for those who want to know .

    • @rhondaouwenga7429
      @rhondaouwenga7429 Před 2 lety +6

      I'm so very sorry

    • @mattsiegel1446
      @mattsiegel1446 Před rokem +8

      Hang in there, stay strong

    • @Songbitslaura
      @Songbitslaura Před rokem +4

      I'm so sorry. My Mom is 74 and We just got the diagnosis and we are right behind you. Prayers

    • @Rustytoolgardener
      @Rustytoolgardener Před rokem +1

      I’m on the same journey as you are as my DW is the same age.

    • @hisrighteousnessbyhisfaith7235
      @hisrighteousnessbyhisfaith7235 Před rokem

      THEY ARE NOT TELLING YOU THE WHOLE TRUTH. MANY TIMES ALZHEIMERS IS REALLY MAD COW DISEASE. BUT THE ONLY WAY TO TELL IS TO TAKE A PIECE OF BRAIN AND CHECK IT, WHICH CANT BE DONE UNTIL DEATH. OUR MEAT IS FULL OF MAD COW

  • @dianed4190
    @dianed4190 Před 2 lety +92

    My father developed dementia and some of my siblings took advantage of him financially. I live in a different state but I got conservatorship and moved him into my home to protect him and care for him.
    Yes, some things were challenging, but he was delightful and I was blessed to have him with me and it was my honor to take care of my dear beloved father.
    (I could never put him in a nursing home, not ever. I don't understand families who do.) He was with me for almost 10 years before he passed, 8 years ago today. I miss him every day. He always told me, "We will all be together again someday." I believe him.

    • @brianwilliamson5415
      @brianwilliamson5415 Před 2 lety

      Thank you for commenting.

    • @janicemunn3868
      @janicemunn3868 Před 2 lety +2

      You took good care of your father as he likely took good care of u when u were young. My father couldn’t have cared less about me…now he’s exactly where he should be and I’d say dam lucky we’re not the ones caring for his useless sss.

    • @noahark2419
      @noahark2419 Před 2 lety +1

      Great son and obviously great father

    • @abringering2164
      @abringering2164 Před 2 lety +1

      What a precious daughter you are! God bless you with a long, healthy and happy life!!

    • @dianed4190
      @dianed4190 Před 2 lety +1

      @@abringering2164 Thank you, and God bless you, too.
      God bless us all.

  • @erniemitch9922
    @erniemitch9922 Před 2 lety +94

    I was only 21 when my step-dad (I was truly lucky to have two fathers while I grew into an adult) died due to the disease and the complications. I only want to tell people: Do not try to bring them to the present. The memory may disappear but emotions stay. LOVE STAYS. Love your family member(s). Listen to their stories and don't force their answers. It is difficult but I promise it is worth it.

    • @macristita68
      @macristita68 Před 2 lety +1

      💗💗💗

    • @friedasenior2805
      @friedasenior2805 Před 2 lety

      More details pls

    • @erniemitch9922
      @erniemitch9922 Před 2 lety

      @@friedasenior2805 I just saw your response, what would you like to know?

    • @erniemitch9922
      @erniemitch9922 Před 2 lety +2

      @@friedasenior2805 if you're wondering about the stages, there is (unoffically) undetected, mild, mid and late stage. New research suggests Alzhiemers and Dementia starts 10-20 years before detection and once they are detected there is already so much damage from the disease the medicines can only slow the progression. From what I remember, once the mild stage hit he really liked shiny things and got frustrated easily. He knew he wasnt remembering things correctly for about 1 year until he hit the mid stage. The mid stage he changed, he started forgetting words and numbers, he couldn't really play his card games any more and got very confused after sunset. (Also known as sundowning) He was still himself but would go through bouts of confusion and could only preform his habits from years ago. He stopped talking as much. At late stage he couldn't even brew his coffee. He slept most the time and was afraid to bathe and had a hard time walking. At the last stages the brain basically forgets how to swallow so eating was difficult. He forgot people's names and was confused to where he was even though he lived with us in our home for 8 years at this point. He stopped really talking at all at that point but he could put down some liquor. 😂

    • @erniemitch9922
      @erniemitch9922 Před 2 lety +2

      @@friedasenior2805 He would ask where his dead brother and parents were and we would say they are at the store or visiting his aunt. Think about how devastating it is to learn a family member or friend died. Imagine being told that for the first time again and again. He may forget the facts but the sadness stays and he wouldn't understand why he was so upset so there is no comforting them. Hallucinations are common at the mid to late stages and you cannot argue with them because that is their reality at the time.

  • @rbk7876
    @rbk7876 Před 2 lety +127

    Lost my Mother 2 yrs ago at age 91 to end stage alzheimers, her mother had it as well, I'm a 62 year old male and concerned I may be getting it, Prayers to all affected by this terrible illness, many thanks to all the doctors world wide for all the research to search for a cure, 🙏.

    • @marikleinen1189
      @marikleinen1189 Před 2 lety +12

      Do some aerobic exercise outside (get some walk) to improve your blood circulation in your body and it's important to get your complete body systems in getting oxygen from your top (brains to all internal systems) to the toes.
      If you do some dancing with music to have fun regularly, then you forget that you are doing the sports, by the way AND you have some socializing opportunities to be in touch with people around you.
      If you combine your fun activities with going to the fitness studio regularly as well, then the elderly people's wobbly skins and the muscles get more back in place as we look younger. Plus, your subconscious mind might be working on benefiting your eyes sights and your hormones to be improved by getting some other type of vitamins that are not prescribed on any pills.
      Imagination and your creativity help to switch from the negative depressed angry minds to the positive minds afterwards, if you take your initiative actions to do some socializing to communicate with other people. That way, you live longer with healthier mind, body, including your soul. The best possible place to do your aerobic exercise is at the "Outside" and "get your sunlight for your skins and for your internal organs are seriously looking forward to the actions of getting pumped up fresh nice clean oxygen" to explain extremely diplomatic ways in the shortest version of the most advanced scientific results of their studies for us all who want to hear the most quickest and the best efficient way to get us all healthy. Of course, eating well balanced minerals, healthy food, and avoid some sugar contained fluids possible to consume really limited amount of daily doses for your best interest. Alright? I have only interest in getting information to get healthy mind, body and the soul(s?). Of course it's really great to get nice delicious recipes. 😋😉♥️

    • @wearetheborg
      @wearetheborg Před 2 lety +2

      yes you will, but above 70 it doesn't make sense to be alive anyway

    • @karanluthra8938
      @karanluthra8938 Před 2 lety +22

      @@wearetheborg human age is 120 without pharmaceutical products in the system. Or say petroleum. Life is worth living till the last breath.

    • @marikleinen1189
      @marikleinen1189 Před 2 lety +2

      @@wearetheborg I understand what you mean. It means when you become age 70, what you are saying is that your life isn't worth anything valuable to keep you here from your family members' point of view. If that is good for you, then it's your choice.

    • @ivankapopova7576
      @ivankapopova7576 Před 2 lety +2

      Яаааааааа

  • @downhillphilm.6682
    @downhillphilm.6682 Před 2 lety +24

    my wife was diagnosed 12 years ago at age 58, still "alive" but cognitively unaware in nsg home. I have never had a "happy" day since her dx.... nor has she.....it has ruined our lives. I live a quiet life alone and visit her many times per week.

    • @JJ-vc6pp
      @JJ-vc6pp Před 2 lety +5

      I feel for your situation, my mother died this week after 6 years of physical and cognitive decline, I have seen the heavy burden on my father who has taken beautiful care of her as she became increasingly difficult, It broke his heart that she was entering the stage where she would no longer recognise him. He is already recovering parts of himself with the relief that he has lovingly seen her out of this life.

    • @weaverdreams
      @weaverdreams Před 2 lety

      That’s why rational suicide makes sense. Look at peaceful pill and the final exit material. It’s a worldwide movement and there’s nothing wrong with making a plan for your exit strategy which is peaceful and will allow you to die with dignity. People were getting portable helium until they diluted it with 20% oxygen. Now just use nitrogen and it works the same way.

    • @beefstew4698
      @beefstew4698 Před 2 lety

      Take heart, my friend. It is your cross to carry. Our Lord is with you both.
      Once you both make it to Heaven…all this will pass. God has His reasons.
      I am caring for Mom…visiting almost daily…and I have various health issues of my own.
      We are not alone in this 🙏

  • @echofive1178
    @echofive1178 Před 2 lety +43

    my dad was that way with past memories. As he progressed (degressed) into dementia, he began to recall memories of his youth and times in the Air force. Was slow process over 7 years but towards the end it really sped up exponentially

    • @mariekatherine5238
      @mariekatherine5238 Před 2 lety +1

      My Dad thought he was back in the Navy and would call me Jim and complain that someone named Walter left his rack messy.

  • @moebanshee
    @moebanshee Před 3 lety +100

    I just saw this video tonight. My husband died November 20th 2019. he was diagnosed with early onset dementia in 1998 when he was 68 years old. He lived to be 88 years old but the Alzheimer's really devastated him. What I want to say is his dementia reminded me of the book or the cartoon Alice in wonderland. When Alice was lost and she sees a sign don't step on the mome raths and the dog with the broom on its face is brushing away the path she needs to follow to find her way home. That's what it was like for Teddy. As if someone was erasing the day before and the day before that and the day before that someone was erasing his life backwards. He could remember sitting with his father listening to Orson Welles broadcast of the war of the worlds in like 1939 but he couldn't remember my name and we were married 43 years.

    • @adeodata6364
      @adeodata6364 Před 3 lety +19

      Sorry, Moe, for your loss. It's a sad disease indeed. Hope you are recovering. It must be a pretty long process. All the best to you. Take care 🌹

    • @lisagroves38
      @lisagroves38 Před 3 lety +14

      I'm sorry...

    • @myworldsbestfriends7067
      @myworldsbestfriends7067 Před 3 lety +15

      So sad for both of you xx

    • @nancyellen8006
      @nancyellen8006 Před 3 lety +19

      Alzheimer’s is a terrible disease. My brother is 72 and he has suffered from early-onset dementia for 10 years. Of course, it’s really his wife and adult children who suffer watching their husband and father slowly lose his ability to be independent. Unfortunately, my sister-in-law does not drive at all so they are often stuck at home. Their daughter is great about helping them with transportation, but she
      works full time and isn’t always available. I’m so sorry that the last 20 years of your marriage were so difficult for both of you. You may feel a terrible loss now without your husband, but I hope you also know this is your time to relax and visit friends and family. I’m praying that you will find comfort in the good memories you shared with him. Take care.

    • @ruthwhall3020
      @ruthwhall3020 Před 3 lety +14

      It's so very sad ,its know longer the person you once knew you see the familiar face but the person drifts further and further away .The grief for your loved one is drawn out day by day.
      I hope you understand that the love was still there for you just covered by lays of illness .please keep well thoughts are with you

  • @veronicabaker515
    @veronicabaker515 Před 2 lety +10

    I wish I knew lots of these things when my mother was alive but I'm sure I'll know others with memory issues in the future and pray that I'll remember them then. Thank you.

  • @WarpFactor999
    @WarpFactor999 Před 2 lety +34

    My mother had Alzheimers. Was heart breaking to see her slowly lose her life from current to her teenage years. Later stages caused problems with constant feelings of having to pee. At one point, she was on the pot, saying she had to go... She would try to make chocolate milk using milk and coke. She would get up in the middle of the night and start opening every can in the cupboard. Asked what she was doing...I'm making dinner...what are you making?...I don't know. It was hard seeing the light behind the eyes slowly go out.

    • @brega6286
      @brega6286 Před 2 lety

      Did you have her urine checked for infection ?

    • @kimgloria6094
      @kimgloria6094 Před 2 lety +1

      How sad ! Your statement is so correct " Seeing the light behind the eye slowly go out " So true , so true.

    • @saeed7099
      @saeed7099 Před rokem

      Does it not make you angry? What a shitty way to go!

    • @leecowell8165
      @leecowell8165 Před 9 měsíci

      That's the horrible part watching the light of recognition slowly fade away into nothingness. This happened to my spouse in 4 years to Vascular dementia. She didn't even know her own name by the time she passed. Regressed from the person I was with for 30 years all the way back to babyhood.

    • @josiahculley7686
      @josiahculley7686 Před 8 měsíci

      your not taught this in america or most places or on tv but almost all health issues are casued by nutrition deficiencies and are easy to fix within a week. Nutrition ivs and nutrition injections supper effective in healing reversing health issues. you heal reverse dementia/altimers by myers cocktail iv and b12 injections. you get dementia/altimers because of b12 deficiencies. for example japan has the lowest rate of dementia/altimers because they health care system make sure there citizens get enough b12. You check your nutrition levels with thourough nutrition blood tests only functional medicine mds will do that and they know optimal levels not reg providers. anybody with health issues the root main cause is nutrition deficiencies. mental health issues, headache issues sleep issues balance issues the list goes on and on and its becasues of nutriton deficeinces. myers cocktail iv, vitamin d injection b12 injection, gludathione iv coq10 injections will heal and keep you at optimal health year round thats what pro althetes and rich people do year round. just type in google nutrition iv therapy near me. go get them done and start healing quick nutrition ivs and injections have been around since 1950's its a hidden secret casue there super effective and cure.

  • @dubiouswords7851
    @dubiouswords7851 Před 2 lety +21

    I am so scared. My brilliant father was diagnosed with Alzheimer's this past week. They did imaging of his brain and found that his hippocampus was smaller than expected for his age. He's 79. This is a man who has kept himself fit, active, and has no other issues but lately has had problems with short-term memory and mixing up past events, time and place. He never ate out, and ate a pretty healthy diet. I do not want to lose him.

    • @katinka946
      @katinka946 Před 2 lety +1

      Ah Lewy Body disease is terrible - eveb more so for the wife/husband of the sufferer.
      Any comments from anyone as to what reseach is happening, what success is on the horizon .. or may be about to become available. thank you !

    • @kimgloria6094
      @kimgloria6094 Před 2 lety +2

      I'm sorry to hear about your father. It's so sad and upsetting. I just made a comment about not subscribing to the healthy eating and exercising preventing Alzheimer's. Yes, it's great to eat healthy and exercise. But I just do not believe it prevents Alzheimer's.

    • @leecowell8165
      @leecowell8165 Před 9 měsíci +1

      No one lives forever. He's already beyond his allotted time here so you have a reason to be apprehensive.

    • @dubiouswords7851
      @dubiouswords7851 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@leecowell8165 yes I understand that. He’s 81 now. Still hard to see him go through this and losing him slowly.

    • @josiahculley7686
      @josiahculley7686 Před 8 měsíci

      your not taught this in america or most places or on tv but almost all health issues are casued by nutrition deficiencies and are easy to fix within a week. Nutrition ivs and nutrition injections supper effective in healing reversing health issues. you heal reverse dementia/altimers by myers cocktail iv and b12 injections. you get dementia/altimers because of b12 deficiencies. for example japan has the lowest rate of dementia/altimers because they health care system make sure there citizens get enough b12. You check your nutrition levels with thourough nutrition blood tests only functional medicine mds will do that and they know optimal levels not reg providers. anybody with health issues the root main cause is nutrition deficiencies. mental health issues, headache issues sleep issues balance issues the list goes on and on and its becasues of nutriton deficeinces. myers cocktail iv, vitamin d injection b12 injection, gludathione iv coq10 injections will heal and keep you at optimal health year round thats what pro althetes and rich people do year round. just type in google nutrition iv therapy near me. go get them done and start healing quick nutrition ivs and injections have been around since 1950's its a hidden secret casue there super effective and cure.

  • @macking104
    @macking104 Před 2 lety +7

    Lost my 92 year old mom to dementia earlier this year. During her last few months, there were days she was normal and could hold a regular conversation. Other days, she was sure she had to go teach school the next day. Other days she was agitated and mumbled. She told stories from our youth to her caregivers. Sometimes She sang songs that I never knew she knew...

  • @nicolarollinson4381
    @nicolarollinson4381 Před 3 lety +17

    Lovely, modest man who has a way of conveying technicalities in a simple to understand way.

  • @peterglevine3660
    @peterglevine3660 Před 4 lety +48

    This is a great talk! Detailed but not technical.

  • @ishouldbesleeping1354
    @ishouldbesleeping1354 Před 2 lety +5

    The presenter was great and easy to understand. He did not talk over the audience and was enjoyable to listen to. Well done (Dr with beard)

  • @anon77_65
    @anon77_65 Před 4 lety +74

    Wow what a fantastic presentation! Understandable to a layman like myself and it's really a fascinating topic. Came here to look into symptoms of a loved one but then got hooked on the remainder

    • @johnkuipers7829
      @johnkuipers7829 Před 3 lety +2

      Way to scientific. I'm intelligent but I want simple explanations. I guess they can't do that to justify their salaries/position/research.

    • @BarbB_in_TN
      @BarbB_in_TN Před 2 lety +1

      @@johnkuipers7829 This is mostly a medical lecture for medical people.

    • @josiahculley7686
      @josiahculley7686 Před 8 měsíci

      your not taught this in america or most places or on tv but almost all health issues are casued by nutrition deficiencies and are easy to fix within a week. Nutrition ivs and nutrition injections supper effective in healing reversing health issues. you heal reverse dementia/altimers by myers cocktail iv and b12 injections. you get dementia/altimers because of b12 deficiencies. for example japan has the lowest rate of dementia/altimers because they health care system make sure there citizens get enough b12. You check your nutrition levels with thourough nutrition blood tests only functional medicine mds will do that and they know optimal levels not reg providers. anybody with health issues the root main cause is nutrition deficiencies. mental health issues, headache issues sleep issues balance issues the list goes on and on and its becasues of nutriton deficeinces. myers cocktail iv, vitamin d injection b12 injection, gludathione iv coq10 injections will heal and keep you at optimal health year round thats what pro althetes and rich people do year round. just type in google nutrition iv therapy near me. go get them done and start healing quick nutrition ivs and injections have been around since 1950's its a hidden secret casue there super effective and cure.

  • @unstrung65
    @unstrung65 Před 2 lety +5

    A very clear and concise presentation that is one of the best I have seen ! Congrats !

  • @Lost_Boy_Graffiti_Writer
    @Lost_Boy_Graffiti_Writer Před 3 měsíci +1

    Thank you for this. My Gram passed from Alzheimer's. I believe some of this is happening to me. Thank you.

  • @martinmaddox5315
    @martinmaddox5315 Před 2 lety +2

    My mom told my grandmother that she would care for her as long as she could make it to the bathroom by herself. I think this was a good criteria for families giving elder care without guilt when the time for a nursing home comes. When your parents reach that time in life many are elder themselves and physically unable to take care of an immobile parent.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Před měsícem

      It’s a very good idea to have a clear criteria like this. Otherwise things can get very bad for both the patient and the family and there can be more guilty feelings.

  • @vfranco22
    @vfranco22 Před 3 lety +8

    In appreciation of panelists' explanations; 'though somewhat complex here; gave (me) a clearer understanding of Alzheimers variable conditions. Thank You.

  • @slchang01
    @slchang01 Před 2 lety +12

    This is a great presentation with an excellent discussing session where the presenters delved into deeper areas of the research and development with inquisitive and open minds. This scientific altitude is what we need, not just in R&D area, but in society as a whole, espeicailly in politics and religion...

  • @pepper419
    @pepper419 Před rokem +3

    I'd love to know the history of that original patient. Where shed been living, what she'd been doing for the years before and what the heck she'd been consuming.

  • @jourdain2010
    @jourdain2010 Před 2 lety +14

    Thank you for this video. I keep looking for more info on this disease. In our family, there have been quite a number of cases and it has been so for my mother for the last 6 years. I rack my brain to know what the best ways to speak to her are. I live far away from them. My dad is at the brink so not easy. I remember how when she was 45 or so she wouldn't finish her sentences. I never thought it might be an early sign. Today she is 72 and hardly recognises people around her. But she is able to repeat what I say on the phone seconds after hearing it as to acquiesce.
    I wonder how a multilingual is affected. She has trouble reading at normal speed, when she speaks to me she reads my name of the screen of the phone many times as if wondering. She has all the terror episodes of not wanting to go to bed with a stranger and so on which is the hardest to deal with for me. She was going to day activity centre but somehow now she doesn't want to or something went on she isn't telling. Their life in winter is too monotonous. I try to tell my dad not to let her watch the news. It s like speaking to a dark hole unfortunately.
    If you need a case study, I might be your best card 😂, a cousin of mine and I started enumerating the number of aunties who suffered the same. Anyway, good luck to all and I hope you stay strong 😊🙏

    • @beannaladay9464
      @beannaladay9464 Před 2 lety

      !۰۰0

    • @jourdain2010
      @jourdain2010 Před 2 lety

      @@beannaladay9464 thanks for your message, although I don't understand it... Happy New year!

  • @EllieHavanese
    @EllieHavanese Před 3 měsíci

    My mom was just diagnosed with Alzheimer's and i am trying to understand it. It is a lot to digest and i am grateful to this video for helping me understand

  • @paulacain9649
    @paulacain9649 Před 3 lety +26

    This video was loaded with great information, and it was explained where even I could understand it.But it does set off some red flags in my life such as forgetting words or forgetting what I did 10:00 minutes prior. Maybe it’s time to talk to my dr.. Thank You for this much needed video

    • @suziquestionable2845
      @suziquestionable2845 Před 3 lety +1

      Well done!

    • @mitseraffej5812
      @mitseraffej5812 Před 3 lety +1

      I at 60 years of age have similar issues, always have mind you. Probably little the doctor can do if it is Alzheimer’s.

    • @kandiceblu1
      @kandiceblu1 Před 3 lety

      You put 10 o’clock in the reply

    • @brittaolson6550
      @brittaolson6550 Před 2 lety

      @@kandiceblu1 Her device probability did that because she was discussing increments of time. I’ve had that problem.

  • @luckychucky3426
    @luckychucky3426 Před 2 lety +17

    I just got on this channel I'm so grateful you're doing a wonderful job you explained it very well if only we could get a cure for this lousy disease

  • @gloriannepapolis6525
    @gloriannepapolis6525 Před 3 lety +12

    Wow, asking questions in the middle of his sentence, he does give time for questions, after each segment

  • @connieguenter5253
    @connieguenter5253 Před 2 lety +11

    Dr Georges Hassan. Thank you for explaining this complicated disease, for me it is anyway. I’ve lost my mother to Lewy Body and now my spouse is going through Alzheimer’s. I have a heart condition and was able to make sense of a lot of terms and helped me understand a bit better.

    • @connieguenter5253
      @connieguenter5253 Před 2 lety

      Now my son was involved in a horrible car accident and needs after hospital care. I am stretched to my limits.

    • @realself9599
      @realself9599 Před 2 lety +1

      @@connieguenter5253 So sorry to hear that. Prayers for his speedy recovery.

    • @connieguenter5253
      @connieguenter5253 Před 2 lety

      @@realself9599 I appreciate that, thank you

    • @josiahculley7686
      @josiahculley7686 Před 8 měsíci

      your not taught this in america or most places or on tv but almost all health issues are casued by nutrition deficiencies and are easy to fix within a week. Nutrition ivs and nutrition injections supper effective in healing reversing health issues. you heal reverse dementia/altimers by myers cocktail iv and b12 injections. you get dementia/altimers because of b12 deficiencies. for example japan has the lowest rate of dementia/altimers because they health care system make sure there citizens get enough b12. You check your nutrition levels with thourough nutrition blood tests only functional medicine mds will do that and they know optimal levels not reg providers. anybody with health issues the root main cause is nutrition deficiencies. mental health issues, headache issues sleep issues balance issues the list goes on and on and its becasues of nutriton deficeinces. myers cocktail iv, vitamin d injection b12 injection, gludathione iv coq10 injections will heal and keep you at optimal health year round thats what pro althetes and rich people do year round. just type in google nutrition iv therapy near me. go get them done and start healing quick nutrition ivs and injections have been around since 1950's its a hidden secret casue there super effective and cure.

  • @1Skeptik1
    @1Skeptik1 Před 3 lety +31

    MCI? I first noticed about age 60, remembering where I parked my car in a large lot (Wal-MU) was a non-issue in my youth. At 67 I attended Real Estate Licensing Classes and passed the State Exam BUT at the end of each class I had a headache and I need to make an effort to remember where I park the car, it is no longer a given. At 70 I'm still high functioning BUT my memory is definitely not what it was. Information (memory) once accessed in an instant may now take several seconds to retrieve. Conclusion: I am fortunate to be comfortably "retired" and I know it is time to get busy on that bucket list. I have several friends in their 80's and few venture far from home. Note: I just finished reading a book and realized I must have read it years before, I didn't recall much detail but I knew where the story was going. Go figure? Cheers

    • @lim4275
      @lim4275 Před 3 lety +11

      Well, you certainly seem to be able to write very coherently, which is more than I can say for many people who are half your age! (Of course, many people never possess that ability, which is sad.) I can imagine it must be frightening to notice even small changes in one’s cognitive function, especially for someone who is clearly very intelligent. I found your story compelling, and I hope that you’re able to maintain your current level of function for many years to come.

    • @NowPleaseReadThis
      @NowPleaseReadThis Před 3 lety +2

      You drive a 2 door convertible. It is blue. I hope this helps you find your car.

    • @1Skeptik1
      @1Skeptik1 Před 3 lety +3

      @@lim4275 How kind, thank you!

    • @1Skeptik1
      @1Skeptik1 Před 3 lety +2

      @@NowPleaseReadThis Chuckle - Cheers!

    • @lim4275
      @lim4275 Před 3 lety

      @@1Skeptik1
      I hopee all is well with you! 😍

  • @kikojofraserrano
    @kikojofraserrano Před 2 lety +16

    Terrific Lecture, Very well explained. I got it and I am not a doctor but a mechanical engineer. My mom suffers of this disease so I am familiar with the symptoms and behavioral effects. Thanks a lot.

    • @shaunandu6703
      @shaunandu6703 Před 2 lety +3

      Check Dr breden I found it 2 late, holding my dad hand at the moment while typing this. I wish I could of did more. Early stage they look like they have help. I found on a TED talk than looked into it more looks promising for some relief.

    • @josiahculley7686
      @josiahculley7686 Před 8 měsíci

      your not taught this in america or most places or on tv but almost all health issues are casued by nutrition deficiencies and are easy to fix within a week. Nutrition ivs and nutrition injections supper effective in healing reversing health issues. you heal reverse dementia/altimers by myers cocktail iv and b12 injections. you get dementia/altimers because of b12 deficiencies. for example japan has the lowest rate of dementia/altimers because they health care system make sure there citizens get enough b12. You check your nutrition levels with thourough nutrition blood tests only functional medicine mds will do that and they know optimal levels not reg providers. anybody with health issues the root main cause is nutrition deficiencies. mental health issues, headache issues sleep issues balance issues the list goes on and on and its becasues of nutriton deficeinces. myers cocktail iv, vitamin d injection b12 injection, gludathione iv coq10 injections will heal and keep you at optimal health year round thats what pro althetes and rich people do year round. just type in google nutrition iv therapy near me. go get them done and start healing quick nutrition ivs and injections have been around since 1950's its a hidden secret casue there super effective and cure.

  • @enasbadri6159
    @enasbadri6159 Před 3 lety +10

    I had most of these symptoms from childhood.

  • @Buttertubsmarsh
    @Buttertubsmarsh Před 2 lety +4

    Well I can see I'm headed in this direction. I often have no memory of recent events....like turning the kettle off or saying Grace before the evening meal. I am focusing on eating more protein and listening to more of my favorite music.

  • @FarFromZero
    @FarFromZero Před 2 lety +7

    Keep in mind, same with alcoholism. Abuse constantly damages the brain. This can be compensated for a long time, but suddenly it's over. No more compensation available. One day a celebrity gives a nice and deep interview, only two or three binge drinkings later and the same person has irreversible turned into vegetables. Don't smoke, don't drink.

    • @mariekatherine5238
      @mariekatherine5238 Před 2 lety +2

      My Dad never drank, never smoked, was an avid bicyclist and hiker, ate a healthy diet, was not overweight, but he got dementia nonetheless. His father went the same way, only he passed at 82 and Dad at 92. It seems to affect the men, not the women. Mom passed at 96, her faculties still intact, and her mother at 101, two months after 9-11. She’d broken her pelvis so was in an assisted living facility, but she managed to get on a landline pay phone and reach me in NY, just to make sure I was okay. She was living in Colorado near my cousins. Her sister lived to 104, also sharp as a tack. Both of them had the Spanish flu as young adults and survived. Two brothers also had it. One died and the other was always sickly, dying at age 45.

    • @FarFromZero
      @FarFromZero Před 2 lety

      @@mariekatherine5238 Did you ever heard about statistics? Another try. When handling toxic substances there is a "LD50" dose. This means, if an average person takes the LD50 dose there is a 50% chance that this person will die because of the poison. So, I could have a brother and a sister and both took the LD50 dose and both survived (25% chance). Is it therefor a good idea to take the LD50 dose? The "my grandpa" and "my uncle" stories about heavy drinking and smoking without any consequences is, sorry for that, the most stupid argument s.o. can present. Smoking kills you, dear. Heavy drinking kills you too. Yes, I'm arrogant - and I don't care. Enjoy your life.

  • @carolmontalto622
    @carolmontalto622 Před rokem +1

    Please don't allow this interruption of audience useless time wasting questions. This has interrupted your professional explanation from flowing smoothly. There is great information to be absorbed and you are providing in an organized lecture. No interruptions from audience please.

  • @LynnFo
    @LynnFo Před 3 lety +50

    I imagine most of us are watching this in order to find out what we can do to prevent Alzheimer’s from happening to us. I certainly am. What little I know is that physical exercise is just as helpful in preventing Alzheimer’s as mental exercise, especially exercises involving balance (yoga?); it’s good for the brain. And most of all, I believe we need to stop eating the typical American diet of processed foods and start eating lots of vegetables as well as healthy fats. Look what’s been achieved with the Wahls Protocol (paleo diet): people with multiple sclerosis and other autoimmune diseases getting markedly better. It’s amazing! There’s no miracle cure, but surely natural foods, exercise, de-stressing, restful sleep, and connecting with other people form the foundation for a healthy old age. It’s a lifelong project.

    • @marycull3607
      @marycull3607 Před 3 lety +1

      @Lynn Forrest. My beloved Mother died from the effectos of Alzheimer's. She stopped eating and then she stopped walking, because her legs just went. She love walking and used to walk up to three miles every day. She always exercised, didn't smoke or drink alcohol. And she always stuck to a healthy diet. I know walking is good, I walk a lot with my dog and it makes me feel good. Mother had a lot of stress in her life. As my Brother in-law did also. He always walked and exercised. And he too went through a lot of stress in the high profile job he had. I'm wondering if extreme stress has any relation to them both getting this disease.

    • @jacquelinearcher1158
      @jacquelinearcher1158 Před 2 lety +6

      My late father was active …and eat home cooked meals …walked …and did puzzle books….and still had Alzheimer’s…

    • @djondjon
      @djondjon Před 2 lety +5

      The typical American diet contributes to inflammation and the manifestation of disease. Among other things, there is a lot of sugar in the American diet; and Alzheimer's is also referred to as Diabetes Type 3.

    • @beyond_the_infinite2098
      @beyond_the_infinite2098 Před 2 lety

      Agree 100% Your brain can only be as healthy as you are. Good nutrition coupled with regular exercise (where you breath hard and sweat a little) goes a long way to preventing dementia and many other health problems.

    • @Anonymous-cq2dtp
      @Anonymous-cq2dtp Před 2 lety

      exercise, ketosis & fasting, autophagy

  • @carolbell8008
    @carolbell8008 Před 2 lety +2

    A very interesting study is Glen Cambell as there are vids of him performing live after he had been diagnosed. He remembers words to many songs also the musical notes played on guitar, but when speaking the words get kind of jumbled.

  • @dr.aniasara7038
    @dr.aniasara7038 Před 3 lety +15

    My housemate has a lot of symptoms, most especially with memory, and not being able to process more than a couple of words at a time. So I have to break it down, and or do a few topics at a time that are essential to the living space. It's a challenge due to the lack of cooperation, attitude, aggressiveness, and not wanting to hear a lot of information. Some of what is going on is from the effects of a brain injury due to an accident at 5 years. The frontal lobe was greatly impacted, and was in the hospital for several weeks or more. I've started to experiencing a person between the age of 12 to 14, yet is 71.

    • @patrickkimani6568
      @patrickkimani6568 Před 2 lety

      Q

    • @brittaolson6550
      @brittaolson6550 Před 2 lety +2

      That sounds just like my mother! I’m so glad I found a place where people know what I am experiencing. Information can certainly cause her to become agitated. I find myself being careful how I approach her with it, in the same ways you mentioned. She also frequently says, “You never told me. I didn’t know,” and, “I’ve never heard that before in my life,” which would be funny if it wasn’t so frustrating after the 300th explanation, and when the last time was hours ago. Thank you for sharing your experience! I like your comparison to an adolescent with the attitude and, in my mom’s case, knowing everything, despite all evidence to the contrary. Good luck with your living situation.

    • @katinka946
      @katinka946 Před 2 lety +1

      The challenge due to lack of coopertion is the biggie here. No matter what you do, no matter how you try, it is a nightmare if there is no cooperation from the sufferer, I am in the middle of this right now.

  • @normaebennettrn9055
    @normaebennettrn9055 Před 2 lety +3

    I've been committed/specialized in Geriatric care (giving) since 1994 (as a foreign student from Oman)....however this info RAISES hope that AD and it "cluster" can be more powerfully approached if one can predict it "before" it hits in "old" age (unfair advantage)

  • @HanhTran-sv3uf
    @HanhTran-sv3uf Před 2 lety

    Diane D. you’re a role model, a loving daughter every parent wants to have! Your father was very lucky to have you by his side as his trusted caregiver. God bless.🙏

    • @dianed4190
      @dianed4190 Před 2 lety

      Thank you, Hanh.
      I think other cultures are far more inclined to keep their elderly parents at home instead of shuffling them off to facilities for strangers to take care of. The American model is inhumane but marketing of these places says otherwise. It should be the rare exception, not the new rule for elder care.

  • @dod1046
    @dod1046 Před 3 lety +27

    What a helpful, easy to understand lecture. Thank very much.

  • @christophersnow9201
    @christophersnow9201 Před 3 lety +9

    An illuminating presentation. Thank you.

  • @redbird8867
    @redbird8867 Před 3 lety +22

    Absolutely excellent presentation. Truly enjoyed it. Thank you.

  • @normaebennettrn9055
    @normaebennettrn9055 Před 2 lety +3

    More on "volunteers needed" please. Tnx! Great info @4am....

  • @jeffreydoerflein3025
    @jeffreydoerflein3025 Před 3 lety +11

    Best explanation of Alzheimer’s and understanding of why

  • @barba5537
    @barba5537 Před rokem +1

    Today I have to make plans to help an uncle into care. His life is now down to a small cluttered room with people coming in 3 times a day to check meds and food. You would never pick it physically healthy, 6'4" strong man ..good looking by any standards. . but yes the lights are out.
    It is very sad. All his sisters had it at 60 but died very quickly after symptoms appeared.

  • @elahepaaschke4839
    @elahepaaschke4839 Před 2 lety +9

    Wonderfully explained thank you!

    • @SugarMDs
      @SugarMDs Před 2 lety

      Thank you (Elahe Paaschke). We will keep your kind remarks in mind for future videos.

    • @SugarMDs
      @SugarMDs Před 2 lety

      That’s awesome. Thank you for watching our videos. Hope that you are learning as you watch.

  • @kathrynsower9936
    @kathrynsower9936 Před rokem +2

    I am 74 and I am having symptoms of Alzheimer’s which I will sit
    down and calmly face. I am aware of black holes in my memory. For example, I don’t recall meeting some dear friends for lunch, ordering clothes that were
    atypical and expensive. And lastly, having. a transfer issue, landing on the facility floor. The police and fire department being called to the clinic to pick me up. (I am told I write eloquently and I am struggling with this comment.)
    Upon reflection, I am going to see if any of my curret medications could be causing the problem.

  • @yourhollywooddream
    @yourhollywooddream Před 2 lety +1

    He says “we’ll talk about that later” a lot. Having been an Alzheimer’s caregiver, I keep thinking he’ll forget to talk about it later 😂

  • @travershuff5764
    @travershuff5764 Před 3 lety +5

    Wow! How uplifting can we get?

  • @kandiceblu1
    @kandiceblu1 Před 3 lety +9

    This was excellent thank you very much!!

  • @FatLittleOldLady
    @FatLittleOldLady Před rokem +3

    I have the language thing going on and replacing words, but I thought I was supposed to be blissfully unaware. Also, I can think of 2 or 3 thoughts in a row. I will forget them in the next instant. At least, the most important one that made me get up to address it. Like something I wanted to do, then I can't remember the sequencing of those thoughts for a cue to remember the reason I got up and soon I can't remember any of it. It's been scaring me because my boyfriend and I have plans. I do digital art a lot and for a couple of years I can't remember the simple word 'contrast.' I mean, really? I just learned I may have colitis but I keep forgetting that simple word I have known all my life because a friend of mine had it. It always seems to be the same words then new words get added and now when I make lists paper lists won't work. I will lose them like my important medical appointments I had under a magnet. I lost them and have to find them but I get distracted a lot doing things and forget what I was doing. I now speak into the mic to remember things. Ugh. Hoping it's lack of sleep, but sleep didn't help.

  • @leecowell8165
    @leecowell8165 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Just because you get into your 60's/70's that doesn't mean you're asymptomatic. I'm 81 and have absolutely no symptoms of any type of dementia. Neither did my Mom when she passed at 87 from a duodenal hernia that she neglected. Not ALL of us old people get the stuff and especially if it doesn't run on either side of the family and mine doesn't.

  • @4labbies
    @4labbies Před 2 lety +4

    I was 11 years old in 1977 when my Mum (aged 52) was diagnosed with Early Onset Alzheimer’s. Just 2 years later she was placed in a seniors care home when she was only 54. She rapidly declined and passed away Dec 1986. I am 56 yrs old now so I have surpassed the age at which she was diagnosed. Since Alzheimer’s was diagnosed in my mother, I am very fearful that I will have the same fate. I never had children, so perhaps subconsciously I was preventing future generations of getting it. I sometimes have difficulty remembering names or I misplace an item and just can’t find it. I am too afraid to be tested for the gene. I am afraid for my 2 nieces and nephew.

    • @leecowell8165
      @leecowell8165 Před 9 měsíci

      That doesn't sound good. At your age those should not be an issue. I'm 81 and notice that I sometimes need to find a name by association. for example who is Kevin Costner? Well I know its in there but I remember he starred in a movie I really liked, Waterworld. So I look that up. However I have NO issue with common things at all. I never misplace things and have never lost a set of keys or wallet as I've always been very organized. I AM absentminded BUT I've always been that way. One time I found my trim hammer in my freezer stuff like that! Don't be afraid you should get checked I would wanna know myself.

    • @josiahculley7686
      @josiahculley7686 Před 8 měsíci

      your not taught this in america or most places or on tv but almost all health issues are casued by nutrition deficiencies and are easy to fix within a week. Nutrition ivs and nutrition injections supper effective in healing reversing health issues. you heal reverse dementia/altimers by myers cocktail iv and b12 injections. you get dementia/altimers because of b12 deficiencies. for example japan has the lowest rate of dementia/altimers because they health care system make sure there citizens get enough b12. You check your nutrition levels with thourough nutrition blood tests only functional medicine mds will do that and they know optimal levels not reg providers. anybody with health issues the root main cause is nutrition deficiencies. mental health issues, headache issues sleep issues balance issues the list goes on and on and its becasues of nutriton deficeinces. myers cocktail iv, vitamin d injection b12 injection, gludathione iv coq10 injections will heal and keep you at optimal health year round thats what pro althetes and rich people do year round. just type in google nutrition iv therapy near me. go get them done and start healing quick nutrition ivs and injections have been around since 1950's its a hidden secret casue there super effective and cure.

  • @huiawalker203
    @huiawalker203 Před 2 lety

    This Dr has great presentation skills. Could listen all day.

  • @gerardrikken
    @gerardrikken Před 3 lety +5

    Marvelous presentation

  • @vincentanguoni8938
    @vincentanguoni8938 Před 3 lety +3

    Great presentation.. Including many factors for dementia.. Other than Alzheimer. Strokes.. Corsicof syndrome etc.

  • @geraldinemckernan9129
    @geraldinemckernan9129 Před 2 lety +2

    Wow I really needed to hear this I keep getting told that I don't have memory problems that I am to young and that I have Health Anxiety I keep passing my tests I am going crazy trying to get a proper diagnosis I want a plan in place for the sake of my young son who is autistic am I am afraid for our future as we are both vainerable adults

  • @JCResDoc94
    @JCResDoc94 Před 5 lety +9

    16:20☼ i see only the anteater peering in thru the window.

  • @Storesdavidal
    @Storesdavidal Před 2 lety +3

    Friends, Thank You For This Informative Video.

    • @SugarMDs
      @SugarMDs Před 2 lety +1

      You're welcome. Appreciate it. Keep watching our videos and don't forget to share them with your family and friends.

  • @Nishittmanaktala
    @Nishittmanaktala Před 2 lety +2

    I think my mom has it.. My brother is taking her to the hospital right now and this whole situation is making me panic hard..

  • @gloriannepapolis6525
    @gloriannepapolis6525 Před 3 lety +6

    Annoying questions, I thought the doctor was going to burst out laughing with the " these are autopsy slides?"

  • @philipmcdonagh1094
    @philipmcdonagh1094 Před 3 lety +6

    Dag nab-it I'll have to watch this again and again. At least its understandable.

  • @ralemc1960
    @ralemc1960 Před 13 dny

    I’m taking care of my mother with Alzheimer’s. We had never been exposed to a family member with the disease before. She hid it well for so long. Now that we understand we recognized there was personality changes in her 60’s. It has helped with hurt feelings we had for years before we understood. Watch for these warnings signs. You know your loved ones. If someone does something out of character question. Like giving a gift and asking for it back. Don’t think it is natural aging to do something if it is against their character. Take warning.

  • @Ray-fx2np
    @Ray-fx2np Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you for these explanations.

    • @SugarMDs
      @SugarMDs Před 2 lety

      Thank you for this great compliment. All of the work and effort put into these videos are worth your encouraging comments.

  • @Fact24h155
    @Fact24h155 Před měsícem

    Merci pour cette présentation très instructive ! J’ai une question : pourriez-vous expliquer plus en détail comment les plaques amyloïdes et les enchevêtrements neurofibrillaires affectent le cerveau des patients atteints de la maladie d’Alzheimer ? Merci d’avance !

  • @beverleycumming1876
    @beverleycumming1876 Před 2 lety +2

    Fasting and sleep hygiene, exercise, novelty…prevent the start of it

  • @jamesjacocks6221
    @jamesjacocks6221 Před 3 lety +7

    Cognitive loss can be non-medical. The removal of all that stimulation associated with work (as in retirement or a disability) will eventually reduce cognitive ability. I have seen it close to home. The people I know who make an effort to exercise their brains after retirement seem to fare better. This may well be just a demonstration of ability, I can't differentiate. To leave a life that was organized around absorbing, remembering and applying information by slowly losing those faculties is perhaps a cruel fate but I guess many folks suffer more because they died with all their faculties.

  • @craigholcombe1901
    @craigholcombe1901 Před 2 lety +4

    In my family this disease is on my dad's side of the family and it skips every other sibling. Its definitely hereditary. I lost my dad to this and it suxs

  • @lisaseckold9296
    @lisaseckold9296 Před 3 lety +11

    I wonder whether, given the high prevalence of domestic violence, many women suffer alzheimer-like symptoms due to brain injury. How similar would their PET scans look to those of alzheimer sufferers?

  • @ageeibc6029
    @ageeibc6029 Před 2 lety +2

    I am alone. Lord i don't want to go through this as l need to manage my living & account for my independent living. Pls advise us how to slow this down. Thanks.

  • @risenshine2783
    @risenshine2783 Před 2 lety +1

    Fascinating and well constructed talk!

  • @shonamacintosh6932
    @shonamacintosh6932 Před 2 lety +2

    Very easy to listen to,Thankyou .

  • @fightalzheimer7892
    @fightalzheimer7892 Před 2 lety +5

    There no one is imune with Alzheimer's and Dementia but the worst thing is yet no cure. Unimune condition can't be avoided but finding the cure should be the only one solution for the sufferers.🌐

    • @johnnydepp4469
      @johnnydepp4469 Před 2 lety

      Contact doctor Akhigbe for your cure to this disease with his herbal medicine

    • @johnnydepp4469
      @johnnydepp4469 Před 2 lety

      Message him on Whats app

    • @johnnydepp4469
      @johnnydepp4469 Před 2 lety

      ✝️ 2348140126449🇳🇬🇳🇬⏭⏭❤️❤️❤️

  • @JoleenLunzer
    @JoleenLunzer Před 3 lety +8

    28:12 Neuropathology

  • @Toadyhead
    @Toadyhead Před 5 lety +11

    What an incredibly elegant presentation. Just one criticism. When discussing the CAT scans, he kept identifying the right side of the brain as the left and the left side as the right. Am I right or am I in the MCI stage of Alzheimer's Disease?

    • @peterglevine3660
      @peterglevine3660 Před 4 lety +1

      He explains this; it has to do with radiological convention. This may help: nipy.org/nibabel/neuro_radio_conventions.html

    • @carissafisher7514
      @carissafisher7514 Před 3 lety +5

      He said we are looking through the person’s feet, not through the head.

    • @wirataadidharma
      @wirataadidharma Před 3 lety +4

      You got it right. No worries.

  • @sharonward4766
    @sharonward4766 Před 2 lety +1

    That is my favorite Emily Dickenson poem.

  • @karenmoore7058
    @karenmoore7058 Před 2 lety +3

    Thank you so much for the help!!!

    • @johnnydepp4469
      @johnnydepp4469 Před 2 lety

      For your cure to this disease please contact doctor Akhigbe for your cure with his herbal medicine

    • @johnnydepp4469
      @johnnydepp4469 Před 2 lety

      Message him on Whats app

  • @l.baughman1445
    @l.baughman1445 Před 3 měsíci

    Glossed over loss of executive function. That’s important. behaviors also include compulsive throwing away food, And having seriously altered personality (increasing aggression) etc.

  • @superclaymaster
    @superclaymaster Před 2 lety +2

    That’s very informative. I understood most of it so I guess I’m still okay.

  • @Clutching.My.Pearls
    @Clutching.My.Pearls Před 2 lety +8

    Thank you for this amazing lecture. Sadly, I'm seeing some of these symptoms in my husband who just turned 70.

  • @aileenegleton222
    @aileenegleton222 Před 3 lety +4

    Yes slowing this down vitamins B and healthy food or diet nutrition

  • @TheGamble17
    @TheGamble17 Před 3 lety +16

    I'm about a quarter of the way through the video but I want to ask if Vitamin B complex would have a benefit in slowing the development of alzheimer's.

    • @user-ek6mz5tf3s
      @user-ek6mz5tf3s Před 3 lety +6

      Vitamin B12 and memantine greatly help the person with this disease yes

  • @dakotacrandall8521
    @dakotacrandall8521 Před 3 lety +18

    I to suffer from the "fog" but no one takes me seriously even as my memory decays....

    • @LupeSunglass
      @LupeSunglass Před 3 lety +4

      About a month ago the fog for me started. I'm getting a little afraid, because I developed a slight stutter and it's slightly hard for me to understand what other people mean. My memory is whack. I'm only 15 so this can't be happening but still.

    • @vickiegrizzle8703
      @vickiegrizzle8703 Před 3 lety +6

      Dakota, I pray that someone starts listening to you very soon!

    • @dakotacrandall8521
      @dakotacrandall8521 Před 3 lety +4

      @@vickiegrizzle8703 kinda to late my mind so far gone. I have my moments of clarity my blackouts and my old memories that started to blend. Like right action wrong place. I just hope other people are taken seriously and not told to "just pay attention and listen to what people say" cuz it's not that easy

    • @dakotacrandall8521
      @dakotacrandall8521 Před 3 lety +4

      @@LupeSunglass it can happen and if it's happening to you...seriously I've had it since 13 that's 11 years and it is just getting worse to the point I cant cook drive clean my own clothes. ACT NOW DEMAND TESTING.

    • @dakotacrandall8521
      @dakotacrandall8521 Před 3 lety +2

      I dont wanna see any of you where I am at rn in life so please keep fighting if u have it and if not fight to never end up in mental limbo like me

  • @jaym9846
    @jaym9846 Před 4 lety +9

    Which have more pesticide? Fruits & veggies OR animal, fish, poultry fat?
    Do pesticides damage the mitochondria?
    Is mitochondrial dysfunction the primary cause of cancer?

    • @margaretdeane423
      @margaretdeane423 Před 3 lety

      Ñyt

    • @thomasmaughan4798
      @thomasmaughan4798 Před 2 lety +2

      "Which have more pesticide?"
      Pesticide is not used on animals or fish. however, runoff from vegetable farms can introduce pesticide into animals and fish.

  • @millicentmunene3373
    @millicentmunene3373 Před 3 lety +5

    Wow. I wish there could be a treatment.

  • @dassretreat8547
    @dassretreat8547 Před 3 lety +14

    Wonderful detailed study on brain. The disease is linked consciousness snd aging. than brain. Brain is an organ only. Attempting to cure a man of dementia is not advisable with chemical drugs., but treat the patient with love and care. I have not come across a Alzheimer parient oured of chemical drugs. But love and compassion works.

  • @beckyweaver5981
    @beckyweaver5981 Před 3 lety +16

    This is what we already know. We know what it is - just tell us how to cure it. and we need more details and more tech

    • @AppleBottomJ
      @AppleBottomJ Před 2 lety +1

      It’s like the eyes.. you can’t just create a new Optic Nerve. Much more complex diseases require rather intense care. It’s a terrible disease

  • @joybaal4393
    @joybaal4393 Před 3 lety +3

    Awesome and very helpful

    • @SugarMDs
      @SugarMDs Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you for this great compliment. All of the work and effort put into these videos are worth your encouraging comments.

  • @sunflowerfina1
    @sunflowerfina1 Před 3 lety +15

    I remember when I was in my 30s I was travelling down to the tube train and there always posters on the wall and suddenly I could not work out what the picture was it was a mix of shapes and colours. I turned my head away a few times and blinked my eyes to see if it was my eyes. After a few minutes, the picture came to me. Was a bit scary.

    • @mariekatherine5238
      @mariekatherine5238 Před 2 lety +1

      Do you suffer from migraines by any chance? Or could it have been related to epilepsy? If this happens repeatedly, or you suddenly don’t know where you are in familiar places, see a neurologist. It doesn’t sound like dementia to me, especially given your age at the time. Did you see bright flashing or did a shade seem to obscure your vision in one eye? Those could be a precursor to a detached retina. If that happens, get yourself to A&E right away. If it was a one-time thing, I’d not worry about it.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Před měsícem

      A few days after my best friend died unexpectedly, I was on my usual drive to work, and suddenly I had no idea why I was there, where I had come from, or where I was going. It only lasted a minute but was really frightening. This was 20 years ago and nothing like that has happened to me since. I think these kinds of things can sometimes be triggered by stress.

  • @judyjackson2260
    @judyjackson2260 Před 3 lety +4

    Great information.

    • @SugarMDs
      @SugarMDs Před 2 lety +1

      That’s awesome. Thank you for watching our videos. Hope that you are learning as you watch.

  • @michelleosborne8951
    @michelleosborne8951 Před 2 lety +2

    I found out I have APOE GENE E 4 from that family tree DNA website and I am so sorry I did. My dad died with Alzheimer’s and now I’m so depressed I can’t get myself together. I’m 59.

    • @alicesais770
      @alicesais770 Před 2 lety +9

      Prayers to you, just do your best to educate yourself and change your diet from the American SAD diet that we have in America. Cut out all sugars and wheat 🌾 and eat healthy low carb veg and healthy fats, meats. Have faith.

  • @martinirving3824
    @martinirving3824 Před 5 lety +10

    There it is: around 57:00
    The fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) PET test. Brain cells less able to uptake glucose in AD patients. (glucose hypometabolism). An indication of chronic insult (excess sugar) over decades, I would submit..

  • @cantavoidtrite
    @cantavoidtrite Před 2 lety +2

    This is excellent. Thank you.

    • @SugarMDs
      @SugarMDs Před 2 lety

      Thank you for the support, much appreciated.

  • @joefromravenna
    @joefromravenna Před 2 lety +9

    I beg to differ about asymptomatic stage. I just said goodbye to our mother and she was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s 2 years before death from vascular disease. There were symptoms. The biggest one was emotional triggering. Before her memory problems there was a lowered threshold to emotional triggers. From joy to paranoia to anger back to laughter. In the case of a coworker he would spend his lunch time watching funeral videos and cry. The memory thing is measurable and tangible, but the emotional thing is less rational and harder to measure.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Před měsícem +1

      Not everyone experiences the disease the same way. Some progress through different stages faster or slower, some experience different kinds of cognitive problems to a greater or lesser degree.

    • @joefromravenna
      @joefromravenna Před měsícem

      @@Sashazur probably because i think multiple diseases might exhibit plaque accumulations. I think there might be 2 or 3 Alzheimer’s diseases classified as one disease. That’s why some blame insulin resistance of brain cells, and others point to gingivitis intrusion into brain tissue, and others think other causes.

  • @momentumstocks3493
    @momentumstocks3493 Před 3 lety +13

    Imagine how many sufferers were put in mental hospitals or even prison prior to 1900's? Laballed as mad.

    • @louisasmith9388
      @louisasmith9388 Před 3 lety +4

      Now in many countries they are isolated anyway and locked in “nursing homes” or “carehomes” which are for these people worse than death. (IMHO as a former “regulator” of such facilities by a role as equivalent to a federal prosecutor investigating complaints then suing if the Justice Dept (in USA) believed settlement instead was not possible to achieve improvements). I saw cases in about 1/4 the US states; yes I saw some of the worst by the nature of the very circumstances of my job. But there will NEVER be enough ways or people who care to protect the most vulnerable from those who prey upon them (with diverse means and motivations) or are simply uncaring and apathetic as they go about their jobs. SOME kind and sophisticated, qualified “helpers” exist I’ve no doubt, but their number is dwarfed by the rest. It always has been so and likely always will be. Having money doesn’t protect you or your family- it may even cause you or them to be targeted for abuses if a family member is even alleged to have a mental impairment ;or a physical impairment). It’s all rather random - like life itself; but fir mysekd is rather have a swift end than any time whatsoever in a paternalistic or materialistic deprivation if my rights to live my own life. I’ve changed my stance ... I do believe we all die, abs that some fates are worse than death so it’s good to leave early (how to do this with certainty is difficult; many people starve themselves to death with family support) if faced with any allegation we are losing faculties. After all, do we want to in effect be murdered slowly in a degrading way or do we want to exercise autonomy? I am aware of strong ethics arguments to the contrary eg by Agnieszka Jawirska, PhD ((bioethicist at Univ if California @ Riverside, previously at Stanford abc before that at NIH’s Bioethice program where she worked with patients who HAD Alzheimer’s. She was edeucated at Princeton abs at Harvard, AB and PhD respectively). Ezekiel Emanuel (MD, PhD, each from Harvard) speaks in favor of always keeping people living to the end - except when it comes to himself (which he tries tj make into a mere joke, however it is a telling reality that he wants to be killed or “allowed to die,” by people who know him, if ever he were to become incapacitated). I could cite many OTHER applied philosophers (bioethicists) with philosophy backgrounds augmented by public health degrees, mental health degrees, law degrees, neuroscience degrees, and medical degrees. I’ll spare everyone. Jaworska’s article from *Philosophy & Public Affairs* (ca 1998), surveys real humans’ cases including previously intellectually high functioning people who executed advanced directives instructing that all life-sustaining help be withheld if ever incapacity became a legal question. One patient seemed perfectly happy eating PBJ sandwiches abd watching daytime chat TV although the patient could not understand the discussion she watched on TV (not very intellectually challenging!). Physicians were intensely uncomfortable withholding basic antiobiotucs when the patient caught a mild case of bacterial pneumonia; they delayed but wanted to ignore/override the advanced directive the woman has executed when fully competent. Jaworska constructs a beautiful argument (philosophically, logically) that is “accessible” to virtually anyone while being also intellectually sophisticated. It depends on people being motivated to help, or at least not to hurt (eg seize assets and steal them, OR work out psychopathology by degrading treatment the istient CAN still understand and experience suffering a result of). Our world is a nasty place.

    • @marilyncooper7061
      @marilyncooper7061 Před 2 lety +2

      I'm sure my grandfather had this and he was put in a mental hospital. So sad.
      Now my mother is in her last stage of this terrible disease.

  • @nederhood
    @nederhood Před 5 lety +16

    Does the brain use the "technique" called 'lateralization' of the brain to compensate and overpower the effects of the Alzheimer's disease?

    • @honerdcouster8723
      @honerdcouster8723 Před 3 lety +1

      Outstanding nederhood where'd you get that? Scanned your channel. Alzheimers ADHD both are on the nih surgical candidates list for minimally invasive surgery for tarlov cyst of the sacrum. What's it mean? They dont say. Sometimes you gotta hear what their not saying. For patients like us. I'm feeling their sending in the Marines.

    • @user-ek6mz5tf3s
      @user-ek6mz5tf3s Před 3 lety

      @@honerdcouster8723 what

  • @brianandlynphilippines
    @brianandlynphilippines Před 2 lety +3

    Children, please save your "Look at me!" questions until the end. That lady was dying for attention.

  • @VKing-di9lo
    @VKing-di9lo Před 2 lety

    This disease is so devastating for the person concerned and also the family. My cousin has been diagnosed with Dementia and eventually needed more help. Sadly, she has now also been diagnosed with Motor Neurone Disease which has now taken over. Her prognosis is now weeks rather than months and has opened my eyes to how shocking these diseases are to a person. It’s tragic.

  • @pattitibble
    @pattitibble Před rokem +1

    So my 62 yo physically healthy husband was dx last summer 2021 with probable early onset Alzheimer's. He has memory speech and executive function impairment, was forced to retire this year. My question is how do we determine where he will be a year from now? What can I expect of his impairment in a year?

    • @saeed7099
      @saeed7099 Před rokem +1

      My mom got it in her 60s as well. Up until two years ago, she's 72 now, she was just very forgetful, judgement a little compromised. But, you could still recognize her as mostly herself. Now, simple tasks are beyond her, hygiene is shot, she wants to go home, you can't really hold a conversation with her. Now, we need help to take care of her because she needs constant attention.

  • @dreamweaver3406
    @dreamweaver3406 Před 2 lety +5

    I'm wondering if someone with epilepsy is more disposed to dementia as they age

    • @janeyd5280
      @janeyd5280 Před 2 lety

      Mary Magnam my friend got op for epilepsy about 38 yrs ago. He memory is very bad now. She can hardly string a prper sentence together.

    • @dreamweaver3406
      @dreamweaver3406 Před 2 lety

      @@janeyd5280 op?

    • @janeyd5280
      @janeyd5280 Před 2 lety

      @Mary Magnan operation. To cut out bad bit in brain causing ceazures.