Alzheimer's a Growing and Deadly Problem

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  • digifan
    The Profiler
    • Oct 2002
    • 14618

    #1

    Alzheimer's a Growing and Deadly Problem

    Alzheimer's a Growing and Deadly Problem

    Sat Jun 5, 6:26 PM ET


    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Alzheimer's disease (news - web sites), which afflicted former president Ronald Reagan (news - web sites) for at least a decade, is a growing problem across the United States and much of the developed world as more people live well into old age.


    It now affects an estimated 5 million people in the United States alone, and experts predict that as many as 16 million Americans will have the disease by the year 2050.

    Alzheimer's affects as many as 15 million people globally

    Fatal and incurable, Alzheimer's starts out as vague memory loss and progresses quickly. Patients lose their ability to find their way around, to recognize loved ones and eventually cannot care for themselves.

    Reagan lived for 10 years after his diagnosis. A report in April showed that women newly diagnosed with Alzheimer'slived a median of 5.7 years and men lived 4.2 years -- about half what a person of the same age who did not have the disease would be expected to live.

    In May, Reagan's wife Nancy made an impassioned appeal for controversial stem cell research, saying it could help find a cure for Alzheimer's, which had taken her husband "to a distant place where I can no longer reach him."

    Reagan's daughter, Patti Davis, wrote an essay in December 2003 expressing concern that some people might think Reagan was still mobile and active, despite his illness, because his family had guarded his privacy so zealously.

    "But it would be a disservice to every family who has an Alzheimer's victim in their embrace to say any of that is true, and I don't believe my father would want us to lie," she wrote.

    Treatments can help slow the progression of the disease but cannot cure it.

    Named after German physician Alois Alzheimer who first described the condition in 1906, it is marked by plaques and tangles around and inside brain cells.

    The plaques, sometimes described as tiny 'Brillo pads', are made up of a brain protein called beta amyloid. Another protein, called tau, becomes deformed and makes up the tangles inside nerve cells.

    As the brain cells die, the brain shrinks and loses its wrinkly appearance.

    Alzheimer's affects about 10 percent of people over the age of 65 and by the age of 85, half the population has it. It is the ninth leading cause of death among those aged 65 and older.

    Story
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    Webair Rocks
  • leg4
    Confirmed User
    • May 2003
    • 4429

    #2
    Is it because we're living older...?


    or is there something in the water that does not compute?
    >>> Contact me here

    email me here

    Comment

    • Fletch XXX
      GFY HALL OF FAME DAMMIT!!!
      • Jan 2002
      • 60840

      #3
      the christians want to live forever but dont want stem cell research, cant have it both wayas fuckers.

      stop wanting to live forever and die off like normal living things and stop this god epidemic making people fear the next thing.

      Want an Android App for your tube, membership, or free site?

      Need banners or promo material? Hit us up (ICQ Fletch: 148841377) or email me fletchxxx at gmail.com - recent work - About me

      Comment

      • Rick Latona
        The Best Ideas Start Here
        • Dec 2002
        • 6037

        #4
        It's my destiny. My Grandfather had it. It's my biggest fear.
        Regards,

        Rick Latona
        http://latonas.com

        Latona's - We Sell Money Making Web Properties
        Note to buyers of websites and traffic: please check our inventory at http://latonas.com/websites-for-sale. If you would like to make an offer on something, just let me know.

        Comment

        • Rick Latona
          The Best Ideas Start Here
          • Dec 2002
          • 6037

          #5
          Originally posted by Fletch XXX
          the christians want to live forever but dont want stem cell research, cant have it both wayas fuckers.

          stop wanting to live forever and die off like normal living things and stop this god epidemic making people fear the next thing.
          You are a man after my own heart. The two things I hate the most are christrians and death.
          Regards,

          Rick Latona
          http://latonas.com

          Latona's - We Sell Money Making Web Properties
          Note to buyers of websites and traffic: please check our inventory at http://latonas.com/websites-for-sale. If you would like to make an offer on something, just let me know.

          Comment

          • SlickRick
            Confirmed User
            • Jan 2003
            • 2849

            #6
            My grandmother died of it.

            A year after my fathers stroke, I think he is showing signs of it. A few months back my mother and father tore the house apart looking for my fathers wrist watch. He put it in the dishwasher. Not sure of those are signs of it but after seeing it first hand with my grandmother I sure hope he doesnt go through that. its pretty sad to see.

            Comment

            • OzMan
              Confirmed User
              • Sep 2003
              • 9162

              #7
              Originally posted by SlickRick
              My grandmother died of it.

              A year after my fathers stroke, I think he is showing signs of it. A few months back my mother and father tore the house apart looking for my fathers wrist watch. He put it in the dishwasher. Not sure of those are signs of it but after seeing it first hand with my grandmother I sure hope he doesnt go through that. its pretty sad to see.
              My Dad has it following several strokes.
              It is sad to see.
              He has no short term memory or of the last last 20 years or so but ask him anything about his WW2 days and he has a photographic memory.

              If Reagan's death brings more attention/research into this then that is a good thing

              Comment

              • digifan
                The Profiler
                • Oct 2002
                • 14618

                #8
                Originally posted by Rick Latona
                It's my destiny. My Grandfather had it. It's my biggest fear.
                I hope you are wrong..
                [email protected]
                Webair Rocks

                Comment

                • digifan
                  The Profiler
                  • Oct 2002
                  • 14618

                  #9
                  Originally posted by OzMan
                  My Dad has it following several strokes.
                  It is sad to see.
                  He has no short term memory or of the last last 20 years or so but ask him anything about his WW2 days and he has a photographic memory.

                  If Reagan's death brings more attention/research into this then that is a good thing
                  Sorry to hear that but you are right.. this is the 21th century and there are still lots of incurable ilnesses we have to face.
                  [email protected]
                  Webair Rocks

                  Comment

                  • Rick Latona
                    The Best Ideas Start Here
                    • Dec 2002
                    • 6037

                    #10
                    Originally posted by digifan
                    I hope you are wrong..
                    Me too! Thx
                    Regards,

                    Rick Latona
                    http://latonas.com

                    Latona's - We Sell Money Making Web Properties
                    Note to buyers of websites and traffic: please check our inventory at http://latonas.com/websites-for-sale. If you would like to make an offer on something, just let me know.

                    Comment

                    • digifan
                      The Profiler
                      • Oct 2002
                      • 14618

                      #11
                      Originally posted by Fletch XXX
                      the christians want to live forever but dont want stem cell research, cant have it both wayas fuckers.

                      stop wanting to live forever and die off like normal living things and stop this god epidemic making people fear the next thing.
                      I don't want to live forever... but my family has one terrible history with cancer.. can I pick a heart attack please?
                      [email protected]
                      Webair Rocks

                      Comment

                      • FlyingIguana
                        aspiring banker
                        • Mar 2002
                        • 10870

                        #12
                        Originally posted by Fletch XXX
                        the christians want to live forever but dont want stem cell research, cant have it both wayas fuckers.

                        stop wanting to live forever and die off like normal living things and stop this god epidemic making people fear the next thing.
                        stupid religion. so much of the worlds problems would go away if religion was out of the equation.

                        Comment

                        • Lane
                          Will code for food...
                          • Apr 2001
                          • 8496

                          #13
                          whoa hold on a sec... it says 15 million globally and 5 million in the US? how the hell? US has only 5% of worlds population

                          Comment

                          • digifan
                            The Profiler
                            • Oct 2002
                            • 14618

                            #14
                            Yes but read it again: it is a growing problem across the United States and much of the developed world as more people live well into old age.
                            So not in India or China... they have to face obesity first.. and they do.
                            Last edited by digifan; 06-05-2004, 10:28 PM.
                            [email protected]
                            Webair Rocks

                            Comment

                            • FlyingIguana
                              aspiring banker
                              • Mar 2002
                              • 10870

                              #15
                              Originally posted by Lane
                              whoa hold on a sec... it says 15 million globally and 5 million in the US? how the hell? US has only 5% of worlds population
                              americans go crazy more than the rest of the world

                              you can't go by world population because the majority of the worlds pop doesn't have the life expectancy of the states

                              Comment

                              • HAPPYPEEKERS
                                Confirmed User
                                • Feb 2004
                                • 7566

                                #16
                                Originally posted by Rick Latona
                                It's my destiny. My Grandfather had it. It's my biggest fear.
                                Goodness.. dont think like that!!
                                Please Read All Of My Posts In A Sarcastic Tone So You Get The Full Effect!!



                                HappyPeekers - April

                                Comment

                                • EviLGuY
                                  So Fucking Banned
                                  • Apr 2003
                                  • 12745

                                  #17
                                  Originally posted by digifan
                                  Alzheimer's a Growing and Deadly Problem

                                  Sat Jun 5, 6:26 PM ET


                                  WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Alzheimer's disease (news - web sites), which afflicted former president Ronald Reagan (news - web sites) for at least a decade, is a growing problem across the United States and much of the developed world as more people live well into old age.


                                  It now affects an estimated 5 million people in the United States alone, and experts predict that as many as 16 million Americans will have the disease by the year 2050.

                                  Alzheimer's affects as many as 15 million people globally

                                  Fatal and incurable, Alzheimer's starts out as vague memory loss and progresses quickly. Patients lose their ability to find their way around, to recognize loved ones and eventually cannot care for themselves.

                                  Reagan lived for 10 years after his diagnosis. A report in April showed that women newly diagnosed with Alzheimer'slived a median of 5.7 years and men lived 4.2 years -- about half what a person of the same age who did not have the disease would be expected to live.

                                  In May, Reagan's wife Nancy made an impassioned appeal for controversial stem cell research, saying it could help find a cure for Alzheimer's, which had taken her husband "to a distant place where I can no longer reach him."

                                  Reagan's daughter, Patti Davis, wrote an essay in December 2003 expressing concern that some people might think Reagan was still mobile and active, despite his illness, because his family had guarded his privacy so zealously.

                                  "But it would be a disservice to every family who has an Alzheimer's victim in their embrace to say any of that is true, and I don't believe my father would want us to lie," she wrote.

                                  Treatments can help slow the progression of the disease but cannot cure it.

                                  Named after German physician Alois Alzheimer who first described the condition in 1906, it is marked by plaques and tangles around and inside brain cells.

                                  The plaques, sometimes described as tiny 'Brillo pads', are made up of a brain protein called beta amyloid. Another protein, called tau, becomes deformed and makes up the tangles inside nerve cells.

                                  As the brain cells die, the brain shrinks and loses its wrinkly appearance.

                                  Alzheimer's affects about 10 percent of people over the age of 65 and by the age of 85, half the population has it. It is the ninth leading cause of death among those aged 65 and older.

                                  Story
                                  Yeah Alzheimers is scary shit.. my grandmother had that when she died.. and she didn't even remember any of us anymore.

                                  I'd prefer a bullet to the brain anyday.

                                  Comment

                                  • OzMan
                                    Confirmed User
                                    • Sep 2003
                                    • 9162

                                    #18
                                    Originally posted by Happypeekers
                                    Goodness.. dont think like that!!
                                    Yup we make our own destiny every day, no matter what genetic predisposition we may have

                                    Comment

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