Guest guest Posted January 12, 2007 Report Share Posted January 12, 2007 (PS -- I posted a reply to this article that many experts now believe LBD is the 2nd most common...) Fwd: Dementia probably of the God only knows type, and unfortunately she's not telling (as is her want from time to time) Again we are in the midst of another round of " I've been rediagnosed disease " going around with some of the PWD " Several years ago just as I started to write there was a mild epidemic of it, and now again some verbal folks, Lynn, , Charlie are announcing their doctors now believe they have some form of dementia other than Alzheimer's disease. I've long suspected there is less a disease called Alzheimer's and more a combination and interaction of the less prevelant diseases of dementia Vascular dementia, Dementia with Lewy bodies, Alcohol related dementia ¡V Korsakoff's syndrome, Fronto Temporal Lobar Degeneration (FTLD)or Creutzfeldt- Jakob disease. When they interact in certain subtle ways they create conditions which we label as Alzheimer's disease. The drug companies and even the National Alzheimer's Association have participated in the lean towards Alzheimer's as THE disease of dementia, at least in America. After all it's in the name of their organization, and several drug companies sell pills approved for Alzheimer's disease by the FDA. To their credit, the National Alzheimer's Association has asserted it really means dementia and all it's probable causes, but it hasn't bothered to publicize that much or develop programs to support people who have them, and the pills have been approved for lots more diseases than Alzheimer's disease. About 60% of people living with a diagnosis of dementia in Europe are further diagnosed as being of the vascular type. Vascular dementia seems to come in two forms. Vascular dementia is the broad term for dementia associated with problems of circulation of blood to the brain. It is the second most common form of dementia. There are a number of different types of vascular dementia. Two of the most common are: Multi-infarct dementia ¡V this is probably the most common form of vascular dementia. It is caused by a number of small strokes, called mini-strokes or transient ischaemic attacks (TIA). A stroke involves the death of a section of brain tissue due to a blockage or interruption of the blood supply. A stroke can cause damage to specific areas of the brain (for example, the part of the brain responsible for speech or language) as well as producing generalised symptoms of dementia. Binswanger's disease (also known as subcortical vascular dementia) ¡V this is associated with stroke-related changes to the brain. Here in the good old U.S. of A. about 60% of those diagnosed with dementia probably have the Alzheimer's type and 15% probably have the vascular type. Who is right and who is wrong? Does it make any difference? Isn't dementia dementia. Yes and no. It makes a difference in terms of public perception and the impact it would have on it, if people who are speaking up and out about their disease now say at the end of their remarks said " and oh by the way I probably don't have that form of dementia I probably have a different form. " Indeed there were several noted " authorities " in the field of Alzheimer's disease and treatment who expressed reservations about reviewing my book out of apparent fear that it would turn out I either never had any disease ( an extreme Munchhausen disease groupie), or I had something other than Alzheimer's disease and/or dementia (perhaps depression requiring I stick my finger in an electrical socket to shock me back into remembering and focusing). After all how can anyone with the disease they have studied all their lives be like them? Why aren't I more like they think I should be? Let's look at his motives rather than the patients history, the doctors who have diagnosed him, his test results, and his own self reported behaviors. " Was he, is he really as smart as me? " they ask themselves. Well what should someone with dementia be like? Like - Mental decline Cognitive loss Memory loss Short-term memory loss Forgetfulness Personality changes Behavioral problems Confusion Repeating questions Becoming lost in familiar places Loss of judgement Inability to drive Unable to follow directions Disorientation Neglecting personal safety Neglect of hygiene Neglect of personal appearance Neglect of nutrition Unfortunately I have all! Just not all at once. I may write another book about how to act like you have dementia probably of the Alzheimer's type so others will support and believe you .For me it is so disabling and disheartening to have to deal with this " do you or don't you issue. " I wish others would sit next to me and feel my frustration at trying to churn this piece out in under 6 hours, when in the past I could have ripped it right off the top of my head. How my mind wanders and I have interrupted myself XX number of times. How I remember something when I am distracted and doing something else and by the time I make it into my office and sit down I have completely and utterly forgotten it. I know what I know, and I know what others who should know know. We both seem to know the same thing. At least thus far! (of course this is always subject to some revisionist doctor who announces I have a bad ingrown toe nail on the left toe of my left foot and because of my serious peripheral- neuropathy I have not felt the pain, but my brain must still deal with it. As a result perhaps my brain is mimicking the symptoms of Alzheimer's disease to distract me from the pain I can't feel in the first place. But I digress albeit digression on an important issue for those of us living with dementia. It makes a difference in terms of the symptoms, the onset of symptoms, the pace of the decline, and the behavioral changes which are at the root of many of the day to day problems of the disease, especially in the early stages. For sure it makes a big difference on how humans beings perceive how they are being impacted by the probable disease. For instance, it amazes me how the relative suddenness of onset of various symptoms is missed by some people with an vascular dementia, yet quickly noticed by some of those with a diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease. I don't doubt the genuineness of the feelings and perceptions of those with one form who are suddenly reshuffled into another deck of symptoms with a different label on the cards. It simply shows the power of suggestion, the ability of our minds to overlook some deficits and concentrate on others influenced by the words of a neurologist who him or her self will admit they are only offering an educated guess. My heart aches for people who are misdiagnosed and/or rediagnosed. How many different futures will the diagnoses of doctors lead them to consider for themselves. How many more diseases must their care givers be forced to research and understand before they can ever hope to come close to empathizing with their loved one. How many groups should all of them attend as the dementia disease of the year shifts in their medical charts. Does it really make a difference in terms of the prevalence of the disease if they live in Europe or the U.S. of A? The discovery of new imagining techniques, correlations with physiological differences between the diagnosed and the undiagnosed (i.e. little A's (for Alzheimer's disease) floating in our spinal fluid vs. little N's (for normal) floating in the spinal fluid of others, and of course there are other more sophisticated measures) is not the giant leap forward the discoverers wish it to be, and sometimes boast it is. We still don't know for sure who does and does not have just Alzheimer's disease because we don't know exactly what causes the disease. We can look at dead brains until we are blue in the face from the odor, and still not know if this or that person had the disease. We just know their brains look alike, using the grossest of measures (a ruler!). It makes a difference in terms of how the population perceives dementia and Alzheimer's disease, a frontal lobe dementia, and Lewy body dementia, and on and on through the other 90 or so sets of symptoms, labeled as diseases, all under dementia's tent. It's confusing at first to learn Alzheimer's disease has befallen on of your friends. What happens when they find out it isn't Alzheimer's disease, is frontal lobe dementia? What form of frontal lobe dementia. And what ever happened to having just plain old vanilla dementia? I am not, I hasten to announce, a researcher, scientists or physician. For the past six years, every year I have been tested (at least once each and every year) with every paper and pencil test neuropsychologists can find (sometimes two or three times in the same year), and every other test my insurance company will allow and thus far it always turns out the same....dementia probably of the Alzheimer's type. I wish that it weren't so, even if I have already written a book titled Alzheimer's From the Inside Out. I would gladly write another book: Inside Out from When you think you have Alzheimer's from the Inside Out, My imagined journey down the road less traveled but it turned that all the time I was on an entirely different road. In the end, dementia is dementia, but before the end, a choice of words is a choice of perceived worlds. I think in the interests of our own perceptions of our selves and our probable diseases we should be careful how we first accept a " probably diagnosis " , and have it checked at least once every two years. If and when individuals are rediagnosed it must create yet a second earth quake between their ears. The issues created just by the announcement " You have Dementia probably of the whatever type " upset most interpersonal apple carts. Labeling what up-set the cart as Alzheimer's simply gives people a name to Google. The human issue is the impact the perceptions of the words used to label the disease have upon everyone with-in ear shot of the diagnosis, and most importantly the impact of those who have the disease whatever it is labeled growing between their own ears. My plan had been to convert merge all my mailing lists (now total almost 7,000 into one, produce a monthly spiffy looking newsletter and distribute it to everyone. I'm not yet there. It is more expensive than I thought, it is more work than I thought, and thinking and making up my mind is harder and harder for me. I need to raise a few more pennies through speaking and my book. A professional service would solve the opt in and out problems, the changes of address, and my own issues with keeping everying straight. This is a small hodge-podge mailing list of about 500 people. Some of them are much much larger and more targeted. You are the people who have been with me the longest, thanks. Google only sends 500 in a batch and even this mailing list is now over 500 so I had to break it up into two pieces. I am always looking for more people to include and chat with. Respond and so will I. Ask newbie's to write and I will put them on it. I am also mindful of protecting your email address from the dreaded spamers. I have only recently learned how to do this using Google and once I get a service only your name will appear on the email. Thank you all for sticking with me. Now that my book is out I ran into a little issue with my publisher about being careless with attaching a copyright notice to materials from the book. I have an arrangement with them that if you ask my permission, I grant it, I inform them and they approve, you can reproduce up to 25 copies of materials taken directly from my book. You must be the personification of a non profit organization, a health care professional. If you are a person with the disease or a caregiver you must jump through the same hoops and you can make one or two copies of whatever. I want to spread my ideas and words to as many people as possible, that is why I use the Internet rather than just publish in professional journals. Please feel free to think of ideas of who might benefit from reading this and ask me. I will work with you and my publisher to quickly make it so. I'm still looking for a few more speaking engagements this year. I have a menu of offerings which can be combined in one visit of speaking to staffs, PWD (people with dementia), caregivers, Boards, Public presentations, public radio and TV, fund raising and whatever you can think of as long as I get to keep my clothes on. It's nice when people pay my expenses. It's great when they pay an honorarium. It doesn't happen all the time, and that is okay too. Call or write me and we will see what we can work out together. The material here has not been copyrighted. Please feel free to use it any way you see appropriate, as of this moment it belongs to yours truly. I am thinking of writing another book, but please go out and buy one first. Go to www.healthpropress.com, or amazon.com to buy it. Or go to your local book store and ask them to order it. I am jumping through a few more hoops before it will be in bookstores on the shelf but we just put new wood floors in our house and we need the money now, so please buy it now. Thanks -- Stand up! Speak Up! Do not become a victim of your own silence. Speak for yourself and those who will follow. Ask Carers and Friends to do the same. Today will never be here again.Time is of the Essence!! Use it wisely!!! Tell as many people as possible your perceptions of your interactions with professionals, with carers, with friends, with strangers, with your government. They won't change unless they know, and they can't know unless and until you SPEAK UP! Seek to create a Palpable Sense of Change and of Urgency! Join a Crusade, Now! Be a Crusader, Now! Lead a Crusade, Now! " Aim above morality. Be not simply good, Be good for something. " Henry Thoreau Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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