In 1906, Dr. Alois Alzheimer presented a key paper to the meeting of the South West German Society of Alienists. In it he described the disease syndrome that now bears his name. Today, Alzheimers Disease has become the common term most people use whenever they talk about any kind of dementia. In fact, the very term Alzheimers has become a catchall for any syndrome in which progressive cognitive dysfunction is the major manifestation.
However, there are dozens of other dementias including, to name just a few: Multi-Infarct Dementia, Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD), Picks Disease, Progressive Aphasia, Corticobasal Degeneration, Lewy Body Dementia, Senile Dementia, Binswangers Disease, Vascular Dementia, Parkinsonian, etc.
From a care givers point of view, it almost doesnt matter which dementia is at hand. The perpetual grief and mourning felt by the care givers will be the same regardless of the specific process affecting his or her loved one.
My special interest is in Multi-Infarct Dementia because that is the one affecting my mother and the one I write about in: DEMENTIA DIARY: A Care Givers Journal. (Another name for this syndrome is Vascular Dementia.)
I should say that I am not a physician or a professional expert in this disease.
I am, by profession, a hospital administrator, so I do feel equipped to at least understand the language of the clinicians. What I know comes from 16 years of watching my mother sink into her opaque world, plus 16 years of discussions with physicians providing her medical care.
Here is the way one physician described Multi-Infarct Dementia to me. It is caused by multiple strokes, some call them mini-strokes.
The victim of this condition may not be, indeed usually is not, aware that anything out of the ordinary has occurred. Neither are his or her significant others.
Perhaps there is momentary weakness, headache, or dizziness, but nothing major. Over time, however, enough damage is done to the brain that symptoms begin to appear such as: confusion, impaired judgment, aphasia, irritability, depression, mood swings, inertia, significant memory loss, and a host of possible others.
Not all symptoms are experienced by every sufferer, but sooner or later most of them may appear. And the symptoms of Multi-Infarct Dementia are not really all that different from Alzheimers or other dementias.
Ive been given to understand that these differences are subtle, hard to tell apart for a layman.
Health care professionals have explained that if one were to line up sufferers of each of the various dementias next to one another you could probably differentiate them--but thats what it would take.
If you are dealing with a dementia in a loved one, good luck and best wishes in your search for help and understanding.
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About the Author (text)Bob Tell is a writer and his Mom\'s caregiver. He is a former hospital administrator and business owner. More information about Bob and his book can be found on his website: http://www.dementia-diary.com
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