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Alzheimer Disease Health Article

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Table of Contents
Author Info: Laith Farid Gulli MD, Nicole Mallory MS, Thomson Gale, Gale, Detroit, Gale Encyclopedia of Genetic Disorders Part II, 2005
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Definition

Alzheimer disease is a form of dementia caused by the destruction of brain cells. Dementia is the loss, usually progressive, of cognitive and intellectual functions. Alzheimer type dementia can be characterized by initial short-term memory loss, which eventually becomes more severe and finally incapacitating.

Diagnosis before death is based upon clinical findings of unexplained slowly progressive dementia and neuroimaging studies that show gross cerebral cortex atrophy (changes in the structure of the brain, usually in the form of shrinkage). Neuroimaging refers to the use of positron emission tomography (PET), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), or computed topography (CT) scans. These are special types of pictures that allow the brain or other internal body structures to be visualized. Professor Alois Alzheimer of Germany first described the condition is 1907.

Description

Sporadic Alzheimer's accounts for over 75% of cases of Alzheimer disease. Sporadic Alzheimer patients do not have a family history of Alzheimer disease and may develop the disease at any time during their adult life. A family history is positive for Alzheimer's if three or more generations of a family exhibit signs of the disease. Patients are diagnosed with sporadic Alzheimer disease after all other causes of dementia are excluded.

There are five common causes of dementia. If a patient has a history of strokes (blood clot in the brain) and stepwise destruction of mental capacities, multi-infarct vascular (arteries) dementia must be considered. Diffuse white matter disease is another form of vascular dementia that must be excluded as a possible cause of dementia. Diagnosis of diffuse white matter disease is made by MRI, which shows generalized death of large parts of the brain.

Parkinson disease is a brain nerve disease, which causes abnormalities in movement and functioning. Parkinson's can be excluded by clinical presentation because most patients experience tremors and rigidity of arms and legs.

Alcoholism can also lead to dementia because patients who ingest increased quantities of alcohol over many years may have digestive problems that lead to nutritional deficiencies. These patients may experience malnutrition and possible lack of absorption of vitamins such as thiamine (B1), cobalamin (B12) and niacin (nicotinic acid). These vitamins are essential for proper function of the body and brain. Continued use of certain drugs or medications such as tranquilizers, sedatives, and pain relievers can also cause dementia. It is important to note that alcoholism and over use of medications are potentially reversible causes of dementia.

The less common causes of dementia that must be excluded as possible contributors are endocrine abnormalities (abnormalities in the hormones of the body). Thyroid dysfunction is the leading abnormality. The thyroid gland produces hormones that are essential for the basic functions of the body such as growth and metabolism. Abnormalities of the thyroid can be diagnosed by a blood test. Chronic infections, trauma or injury to the brain, tumors of the brain, psychiatric abnormalities such as depression, and degenerative disorders should also be ruled out as causes of dementia. (A degenerative disorder is a condition that causes a decrease in mental or physical processes).

Familial Alzheimer disease accounts for approximately twenty-five percent of cases of Alzheimer disease. Familial Alzheimer's is diagnosed if other causes of dementia are ruled out and if there is a family history of the disease. Familial Alzheimer's is further subdivided into early and late onset. Early onset indicates that the patients exhibit unexplained dementia before the age of 65. Late onset refers to the development of unexplained dementia after the age of 65. Late onset is two to four times more prevalent than early onset.

Alzheimer disease associated with Down syndrome accounts for the remaining less than one percent of Alzheimer cases. Studies have shown that Down syndrome patients over the age of forty all develop the brain cell changes that are characteristic of Alzheimer disease. Because the function of the brain is already impaired in a Down syndrome patient it is difficult to determine if changes in outward actions are related to Down syndrome or to the progression of Alzheimer disease.

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