Alzheimer's Disease Warning Signs
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Here is an extract from the ebook "The Complete Guide to Treating & Coping with
Alzheimer's Disease"
 
         Ten Warning Signs of Alzheimer's Disease

The Alzheimer's Association puts forward ten main warning signs as a checklist to educate
all family members. This helps you to understand if anyone in the family may be suffering
from Alzheimer’s disease.

You can then get further investigation by qualified medical people and more help if you or
your loved one is showing the signs on this list:

Loss of Memory: It is natural for the elderly to forget some names or things. Sometimes,
Alzheimer’s patients are unable to recollect recent events. One of the most common signs
is when people do not remember any part at all of a memorable personal event.

Language and Communication Skills: Alzheimer’s disease patients lose their mastery
over language and cannot communicate well. They use vague words which can be
incomprehensible to others. They also forget simple words used in daily conversations.
They cannot express themselves properly and clearly. Normally, old people fumble for
words only occasionally. If you see your loved one stumbling more and more often, one
possibility is that they might have A.D.

Regular and Routine Jobs: Alzheimer’s disease makes people incapable of planning or
thinking about their daily routine. They cannot complete regular and normal tasks like
making telephone calls, cooking a meal, etc. They turn ‘blank’ at times and cannot
remember why or what they were doing or thinking of doing.

Impaired Judgment Capacity: Sometimes, old people make vague decisions. If you have
Alzheimer’s disease, you are prone to making irrational decisions regularly - like giving away
huge sums of money without reason or wearing improper clothing which is unsuitable for
the weather conditions.

Personality Changes: A person's personality does change with age. As a person ages,
they are much more sure of who they are and can become more dignified and command
greater respect with age. However, people with Alzheimer’s disease undergo drastic
personality changes like becoming confused and dependent on family members, or
suspicious of everything and everybody, or scared of everything.

Familiarity with Surroundings: Alzheimer’s disease patients forget their own
neighborhood, lose their way and may wander anywhere. They may not be able to find
their way back home or remember how they got somewhere. If you have a loved one with
this disease, get them a bracelet with their address and phone number.

Reluctance to Do Anything: Alzheimer’s disease patients are disinterested in anything
around them and they may sit in front of TV for hours at a stretch, but not even follow the
program which they are watching.

Misplacement: Although it is common for you to misplace things at times, people with
Alzheimer’s disease put things in the most unusual places like keys in refrigerator or a coin
purse in a sugar bowl, or even in the garbage.

Abrupt Changes in Mood: Although you feel moody at times, patients with Alzheimer’s
disease develop sharp changes in their moods.

Thinking Abilities: People with Alzheimer’s disease find it difficult to do mental
calculations. Most older people can keep their mental faculties sharp.
 
Find the above extract from the ebook "The Complete Guide to Treating & Coping with
Alzheimer's Disease" useful?  Then, read on...
 
It's a good bet that you, like the rest of us, have forgotten something and then, jokingly,
said, "it must be old-timers disease."

We didn't mean to be hurtful, but our comment can cut deeply if there is a person present
who is trying to cope with the disease.

With more than 18 million known cases of Alzheimer's Disease world-wide, the odds are
that you have had some contact with someone who is close to this horrible degenerating
disease. It may be a victim or a family member of a victim.

Maybe you even suspect that a loved one is exhibiting early stage symptoms of Dementia
and/or Alzheimer's Disease.  If you think that may be the case,
The Complete Guide to
Treating & Coping with Alzheimer's Disease
is just what you need.

Learning what you need to know to understand the disease gives you a definite roadmap
for
how to cope, not only with the disease but with caring for your loved one.

Alzheimer's Disease is actually a form of dementia.  What comes first - dementia or
Alzheimer's?  There are many conditions being investigated as possible causes of
Alzheimer's Disease.

We are still exploring the possible causes of Alzheimer's Disease.  

This disease affects vital areas of the patient's brain with serious effects on those parts
which control long-term memory, motion, reasoning and thought.

If you suspect that a friend or family member is suffering from Alzheimer's, early detection
is critical.  

No matter what your situation is, you will find the answers you need right here:

Need to identify the symptoms?. . .Chapter 5 breaks it down for you into the three types
of symptoms:  early, developing and serious

There are 10 early warning signs and you can learn more about them in Chapter 6

Chapter 7 outlines the different stages of Alzheimer's Disease

Did you know that estrogen plays a role for women in regards to this disease?  Chapter 10
explains it for you.

Discover how important early signs can be in Chapter 11.

Do you need to learn better ways to communicate with an Alzheimer's patient?  Chapter 26
teaches you how to do that effectively.

How to care for an Alzheimer's patient without sacrificing your own health can be learned in
Chapter 31.

Does your friend or family member exhibit signs of uncertainty when attempting simple,
routine tasks?  Are behavioral patterns escalating to borderline violence?  Is there a family
history of dementia or Alzheimer's Disease?

Any or all of the above could just be normal signs of aging.  However, why take the risk?  
Don't wait until it's too late.

Get the answers you need now!

Remember,
early detection is critical to diagnosing and managing this debilitating
disease.  Don't bet a life on it.  Grab your copy now!
 
 
"The Complete Guide to Treating and Coping with Alzheimer's Disease" ebook normally
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Brought to you by Jacob Gan, PhD (Michigan)