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Update on Dotty

Bob DeMarco from Alzheimer’s Reading Room writes an update on his mother, Dotty’s, condition.

She is talking and asking a lot of questions. Most of her sentences are still starting with the word, Bobby.

It is hard for me to say she is getting better. She is definitely much improved versus last Friday and Saturday. On the other hand, she is much worse then last Monday, May 17.
Keep in mind on May 10, she was "there". Now, "not there".

On May 10, she was able to walk around the clinical trial office, see the neurologist, move from room to room, and took a serious of tests that included verbal interviews. She walked from the parking lot and into the doctor's office while I held her hand. She walking into and out of the doctor's office that day.

Compare this to last Thursday and Friday when I had to use a wheelchair to get her to the doctor and home.
What a difference two weeks has made. Dotty has never acted like this before. Not even close. By the way, she is not acting mean.

I believe she does know there is something wrong and knows that she is not feeling well.

We head back to the doctor's office this afternoon.

Read More at Alzheimer’s Reading Room

AlzCare in Texas. Compassionate treatment of Alzheimer’s Disease in comfortable, home settings. Alzcare facilities are located near San Antonio and in New Braunfels, Waco, Victoria, and San Marcos.

Caregivers Risk of Illness

A story about the Coskie family, and the effects on Dixie Coskie, while taking care of her son, Paul Coskie. Their story illustrates the common effects of caregiving on the caregiver. Emotional, mental, and physical. The second half of the article goes into coping with the emotions, stress, and guilt that go along with caregiving.

Caring for her son, Paul Coskie, made Dixie Fremont-Smith Coskie so weak she couldn't get out of bed.More than 65 million people -- nearly a third of the U.S. population, provide care for a friend or family member during any given year, according to the National Family Caregivers Association.

In an editorial in the May issue of the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, psychologist Peter Vitaliano explains that many of these people suffer just as Coskie did.

"Thousands of articles have reported greater psychological and physical health problems in caregivers than in non caregivers," writes Vitaliano, a professor in the department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the University of Washington School of Medicine.

In the same issue, a team led by researchers at the University of Utah studied 1,221 elderly married couples and found someone was six times more likely to develop dementia if his or her spouse had dementia.

It's not entirely clear why caregiving can make you sick, but researchers believe depression and chronically high levels of the stress hormone cortisol, both of which often accompany caregiving, take a toll on the body's immune and cardiovascular systems.

Coskie says she never dreamed stress could wreak such havoc on her body, but in retrospect it makes sense.

Read More at CNN Health

AlzCare in Texas. Quality Alzheimer’s treatment in a home setting. San Antonio, New Braunfels, San Marcos, Waco, Fredericksburg, Victoria.

Gene Testing

Bob DeMarco with Alzheimer’s Reading Room writes his opinion on Alzheimer’s Gene Testing. DeMarco gets emails fairly frequently asking about Gene Testing, and if their symptoms indicate that they should get tested. Forty percent of people who have late onset Alzheimer’s have the gene. This test is fairly expensive, and there are considerations to think on before deciding to take a test.

Blood tests are available that can identify which APOE alleles a person has, but it is not yet possible to predict who will or will not develop AD. APOE ?4 is only a risk factor for Alzheimer's disease, the blood test cannot predict for sure whether a person will develop AD or not.

What you want to know before you take a saliva test for DNA, however, is if the test can the detect the APOE ?4 gene (allele). If it can, you need to ask about the accuracy of the test. These are important considerations before spending money on a gene or DNA test.

You can expect to pay around $400 for a high quality test.

If you don't have the APOE ?4 gene you are still at risk for Alzheimer's disease. Why? If you read the paragraph above only forty percent of the people that develop late onset Alzheimer's have the gene. The other sixty percent don't.

People want to know my opinion on gene testing for Alzheimer's disease.

If you think it will help, I am for it. I am not opposed in anyway to a person learning more about their genetic make up and what diseases they might be predisposed to by birth. One positive of a genetic test is that it might convince the person to start living a healthier lifestyle. To really focus on nutrition. The test could be the catalyst.

Read more at Alzheimer’s Reading Room

AlzCare – Quality Alzheimer’s treatment in Texas, New Braunfels, Victoria, Waco, and San Marcos

Depression linked to low vitamin D levels in senior adults

New research is showing that senior citizens with low levels of vitamin D are more prone to depression.

so sad Many studies have been published recently on the potential health benefits of vitamin D, and the potential risks of deficiency. Low vitamin D levels have been linked to heart disease, stroke, high blood pressure, and more severe asthma.

In older people, insufficient vitamin D is quite common, and has been linked to fractures, worse physical function, greater frailty, and a wide variety of chronic illness.

Read more at MSNBC…

AlzCare in Texas. Treatments for Alzheimer’s Disease in comfortable, familiar home settings. New Braunfels, San Antonio, Victoria, Waco, San Marcos, Victoria.

Dementia Can Cause Lose of Taste

Flavor is the spice of life. The idea of eating and enjoying a meal without taste is unthinkable. But even this very ordinary part of our experience can be diminished with dementia. Knowing this give us even more compassion for our elder friends who, along with losing their memory, may be losing their ability to taste.

FlavorsHOME_C2 New research has revealed evidence that these behaviors are linked to a loss of meaning for flavors, as reported in the June 2010 issue of Elsevier's Cortex.

Dr. Katherine Piwnica-Worms from Washington University in St Louis, Missouri, together with Dr. Jason Warren and colleagues from University College London, investigated the processing of flavor information in patients with semantic dementia, a degenerative disease affecting the temporal lobes of the brain.

Read more at Science Daily…

Alzcare in New Braunfels. Caring treatment for Alzheimers patients in Texas in comfortable, home settings.

Rope to Remember 2010

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From the AlzCare Blog Network

09/09/2010 - 14:24

Lori La Bey of Alzheimer's Speaks and Senior Lifestyle Trends
Check out this great article from Mayo Clinic.  It has wonderful tips when...


09/09/2010 - 12:52

The results suggest that searching online may be a simple form of brain exercise that might be employed to enhance cognition in older adults -- Teena D. Moody, the study's first author and a senior research associate at the Semel Institute at...


09/09/2010 - 09:51

I like to think the B12 shot helped. But, I have no concrete evidence to prove it does. I do know this, when we go to get that B12 shot today I'll feel good about it and maybe that helps me to be a better Alzheimer's caregiver.....By Bob DeMarco...


09/09/2010 - 01:01

You've got mom set up for several hours a week of in-home care. She does well enough, but she seems...


09/08/2010 - 20:46

By Bob DeMarco
Alzheimer's Reading Room

I realize this is not for everyone. So please be patient and bear with us.

I often get asked for photo's or video of Dotty. Believe it or not, Dotty has a lot of fans on this blog....


The Latest Alzheimer's News

09/09/2010 - 17:06

Daily doses of vitamin B can halve the rate of brain shrinkage in elderly people with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), which can be a precursor to Alzheimer's, researchers at Oxford University said Thursday.


09/09/2010 - 11:44

LAPD Seeks Help in Finding Missing Man with Alzheimer's DiseaseBell Gardens SunBy EGP News Report A 70-year-old man with Alzheimer's disease is considered missing, a police sergeant said Tuesday. Jose Leal Sanchez was last seen Sept. ...


09/09/2010 - 11:42

New research finds an enzyme that keeps traffic flowing in the right direction in the nervous system.


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