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Alzheimer's & Dementia

Health Conditions

Alzheimer's and dementia patient

Alzheimer's Disease attacks the brain, causing problems with memory, thinking and behavior. It is the most common form of dementia and the seventh-leading cause of death in the U.S.

Facts & Overview Symptoms Diagnosis & Treatment Risk Factors Caregiver Guidance

Today, the only definite way to diagnose Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) is to find out whether there are “plaques” and “tangles” in brain tissue, two abnormal structures that are prime suspects in damaging and killing nerve cells.

Plaques build up between nerve cells, and contain a protein fragment called beta-amyloid. Tangles are twisted fibers of another protein called tau. Tangles form inside dying cells. The plaques and tangles form in a predictable pattern, beginning in areas important in learning and memory and then spreading to other parts of the brain.

To look at brain tissue, however, doctors usually must wait until they do an autopsy. Therefore, doctors can only make a diagnosis of “possible” or “probable” AD while the person is still alive. At specialized centers, doctors can diagnose AD correctly up to 90 percent of the time.

Doctors use several tools to diagnose “probable” AD, including:

  • Questions about general health, past medical problems, and ability to carry out daily activities
  • Tests of memory, problem solving, attention, counting, and language
  • Medical tests, such as tests of blood, urine, or spinal fluid, and brain scans

Sometimes these test results help the doctor find other possible causes of the person’s symptoms. For example, thyroid problems, drug reactions, depression, brain tumors, and blood vessel disease in the brain can cause AD-like symptoms.

No treatment can stop AD. However, for some people in the early and middle stages of the disease, the drugs tacrine, donepezil, rivastigmine, or galantamine may help prevent some symptoms from becoming worse for a limited time.

Summarized from information from the National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health

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