How to Search For Information You Need
In general, finding information free on search engines requires a lot of patience and is time consuming. Free websites most likely provide only limited information if you are searching for something important. The best choice is to buy it because bought information is usually written by specialists and is copyrighted. [August 13, 2008 10:25:46 am] By Chic Ngo
1. Alzheimer's Disease - 1st Stage By Linda J Bruton

The chance of having Alzheimer's disease increases with age. Individuals
younger than age 60 rarely have this disease. Alzheimer's disease affects
up to 50 percent of people older than 85. For each year over 85, the risks
of having Alzheimer's disease will increase.
2. Alzheimer's Disease And the Baby Boomers
By Linda J Bruton
The Baby Boomers generation defined a sociological group of individuals who protested, pronounced and declared their independence as a socially conscious, trend setting generation. The Baby Boomers have shared consciousness unlike any other generations. These individuals grew up watching “”The Mickey Mouse Club on TV. They also experienced the horror of the assassination of a President.
3. Promising Research For Alzheimer's Disease Cure
By Linda J Bruton
There are scientific advancements that look promising for controlling and preventing the onset of Alzheimer's disease. Alzheimer's is such a complex disease that most experts anticipate that a drug that will control the disease will very likely contain a drug cocktail. The treatment that is only conjecture may include a regimen of drugs that is used to treat AIDS
4. Alzheimer's Disease: 2nd Stage Symptom
By Linda J Bruton
Changes in the brain of Alzheimer's sufferers may begin 10 to 20 years before any visible signs of dementia or any symptoms of Alzheimer's appear.
5. Final Stage of Alzheimer's Disease
By Linda J Bruton
A loved one in the final stages of Alzheimer's requires care 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. A patient diagnosed with Alzheimer’s may live from eight to twenty years before reaching the end stage of Alzheimer’s disease.
6. Alzheimer's Disease – Accepting the Changes
By Linda J Bruton
When someone in the family is diagnosed with Alzheimer's Disease there are many changes that occur in the day-to-day experiences of the patient. However, no less traumatic are the radical changes that occurs within the family structure.
7. Home Healthcare Can Help the Mentally Challenged Elderly Feel Safe in Their Own Homes By Alice Lane
Loss of mental acuity among the elderly, known as dementia, can have different symptoms and different causes. The elderly may experience difficulty in performing everyday tasks, feel disoriented and confused, suffer from recent memory loss, show poor judgment and loss of initiative, misplace things, or experience changes in mood, personality, and behavior. Home healthcare in Illinois is the best option for the elderly who are suffering from mild dementia since they can feel the safest and most secure in the familiar surroundings of their own homes.
8. Alzheimer's Disease - 7 stages of Decline
By Linda J Bruton
The seven key symptoms that are charted in the FAST evaluation characterize the progression of Alzheimer's disease. This test provides an indication of the level of care that is required for a person who has Alzheimer's disease. The symptoms range from unimpaired functions to a very severe cognitive decline.
9. Prevention of Alzheimer's Disease Needs 4 Lifestyle Changes
By James Ellison
Although very little is known about the origination and advancement of Alzheimers disease, a list of factors have been displayed through a variety of experimental studies to help in the prevention of Alzheimers disease. If you have Alzheimers in your family history, or only if you are aging, you might think about adding some of the following risk reducers in your way of life.
10. Intimacy, Marriage and Alzheimer's Disease
By Pauline Go
Any time it is not easy to talk about sex, sexuality and intimacy. It was not easy when we were youngsters and it is definitely not easy when we grow old. For some people sex is enjoyable while for others it is embarrassing or frightening. Nonetheless, sex is a part of our lives and when it is coupled with Alzheimer's disease, it can pose quite a problem.
11.Alzheimer's Disease: Responding to Sundowning
By Harriet Hodgson
Coping with my mother's forgetfulness was easy in the early stages of her dementia. Things changed after she started to hallucinate. I was taking my mother back to her apartment in an assisted living community when she described one of her hallucinations.


