1 / 8

Alzheimer’s Disease

Alzheimer’s Disease. Robert Grimshaw, MD FACP. A Lifetime of Quality Care That’s Convenient & Complete. Dr Alois Alzheimer. Dr Alois Alzheimer described the disease which carries his name in 1906. It is now the most common cause of memory loss in the U.S.: 4 million have it now

joella
Download Presentation

Alzheimer’s Disease

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Alzheimer’s Disease Robert Grimshaw, MD FACP A Lifetime of Quality Care That’s Convenient & Complete

  2. Dr Alois Alzheimer Dr Alois Alzheimer described the disease which carries his name in 1906. It is now the most common cause of memory loss in the U.S.: • 4 million have it now • 14 million are expected to have it by 2050 • 1 in 10 people over 65 has it • half of those over 85 have it • US costs are estimated to be at least $100 billion yearlyaverage lifetime cost per patient is $174,000

  3. What is Alzheimer’s Alzheimer’s Disease (AD): is not yet clear what the cause or causes of AD are. Autopsy studies show dense "neurofibrillary tangles"and "senile plaques" in brain specimens. Beta-amyloid and tau proteins are strongly implicated, as are some nerve transmitter deficiencies. At least 4 genes are suspected.

  4. Warning Signs Include: Memory loss at work Problems with familiar tasks such as forgetting you made a meal Problems with simple words Getting lost in your own neighborhood or home Poor judgement such as not dressing properly Abstract thinking issues such as inability to work numbers Misplacing things bizarrely such as putting an iron in the freezer Unexplained mood swings Changes in personality Profound loss of initiative

  5. How is Alzheimer’s Diagnosed? No one test (except brain biopsy!) is diagnostic. History & physical exam, a brief memory test and lab tests to rule out other diagnoses (such as low thyroid and vitamin B-12 deficiency) are done. MRI or CT scan of the brain may be needed to rule out multiple small strokes.

  6. Non-Drug Treatments: Mental Activity:A study by Dr. Robert Friedland and colleagues at Case Western Reserve in Cleveland found that the more you do (mentally), the more you can do. Those who were more active mentally in early and midlife had 1/4th the chance of AD. Exercisereduced the risk of AD in senior women in 1 study by 13% for every extra mile walked daily. Antioxidants: Vitamin E (2000 units daily) was shown to reduce the risk of AD in the Alzheimer Prevention Study; in the Rotterdam Study beta-carotene and vitamins C & E reduced AD, especially in smokers. Alcohol: in a Boston study, 1-2 daily drinks led to less AD. Low-fat Diet: Another Cleveland study showed high-fat diet increased AD 5-6 fold in susceptible patients.

  7. Non-Specific Drug Treatment: Diabetes: control of type 2 diabetes reduced dementia in a Dutch study. Blood Pressure: control of blood pressure also reduced dementia in several studies. Statins: anti-cholesterol drugs (lovastatin, etc). Reduce AD Anti-inflammatories: Aspirin, ibuprofen and similar drugs have been associated with reduced AD in several observational studies. Anti-Alzheimer Drugs: Tacrine (Cognex) was the first; little used now due to liver risks. Donepezil (Aricept) is now the most used, working by increasing the neurotransmitter acetylcholine. Rivastigmine (Exelon) is a similar drug, with perhaps a bit more improvement in memory, but with higher rates of stomach trouble here. Galantamine (Reminyl) is the newest drug (derived from the daffodils), acting similarly, but with a 16% drop out rate due to side effects. There are no head-to-head studies.On these drugs, avoid Ditropan, Levsin, Atrohist, Bentyl; they counter the effect.

  8. Future Vaccine? Elan Pharmaceutical has a vaccine trial underway against one of the proteins in the amyloid plaques.

More Related