Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: dementia + kill + can  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

 News results: Standard Version | Text Version | Image Version Results 1 - 10 of about 37 for dementia kill can. (0.23 seconds) 
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Trying to kill 'monster' disease
Jackson Clarion Ledger, MS - Nov 16, 2008
Although my family's disease is rare, "it's becoming a very important disorder," which could shed light on other forms of dementia, she said. ...
Ginkgo Biloba does not help either
ZDNet Blogs - Nov 20, 2008
Almost one in 10 developed some form of dementia, slightly more in the ginkgo group than the control. What seems to work best, in preventing all sorts of ...

Telegraph.co.uk
Terry Pratchett to deliver dementia petition to No 10
Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom - Nov 24, 2008
"The first step is to talk openly about dementia because it's a fact, well enshrined in folklore that if we are to kill the demon then first we have to say ...
Storing Up Smarts for a Rainy Day
Newsweek - Nov 10, 2008
Explain this: if Alzheimer?s disease is caused by the accumulation of sticky amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles that kill neurons (as the leading ...

NewsHour
Researchers Explore New Technologies, Treatments for Dementia Patients
NewsHour - Nov 13, 2008
SPENCER MICHELS: Whether and when these approaches can cure or modify dementia are still open questions, but scientists are convinced that they can progress ...
Man who shot at deputies returned to state hospital
Franklin Press, NC - Nov 20, 2008
According to the Mayo Clinic, vascular dementia is an umbrella term that describes impairments in cognitive function caused by problems in the blood vessels ...

Telegraph.co.uk
Blood pressure readings in GP surgeries 'may not predict heart ...
Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom - Nov 24, 2008
The Blood Pressure Association warns that hypertension can also cause kidney disease, some types of dementia and eye problems for sufferers, ...
To kill the demon, we first have to say its name
Coventry Telegraph, UK - Nov 12, 2008
"Seven hundred thousand people who have dementia in this country are not heard. I'm fortunate, I can be heard, This report allows others to bring dementia ...
12 Reasons to Really Quit Smoking
U.S. News & World Report, DC - Nov 14, 2008
And in 2004, researchers reported in Ne urology that smoking appeared to hasten cognitive decline in dementia-free elderly smokers, bringing it on several ...
Former NFL players praise heart-screening program
Trading Markets (press release), CA - Nov 27, 2008
But I believe what you don't know will kill you." To see more of The Kansas City Star, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.kansascity.com. ...
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: dementia + kill + quickly  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)


Times Online
Rember, the drug that helps alzheimers sufferers
Times Online, UK - Aug 2, 2008
There is no effective treatment for someone like Loveday, which is what makes dementia so frightening. He has medication to calm his aggression and sleeping ...

CVG Online
PC Gamer's Top 100 (P4)
CVG Online -
Few characters rival Sander Cohen's sickly dementia, and few games can offer so sublime a moment as being assailed by twirling ballerinas while Tchaikovsky ...
Weekend Blog: Barack Obama: Africa(n) and America(n)
Sofia Echo, Bulgaria - Jul 25, 2008
They kill slowly or quickly in order to make profits from the illegal trade in narcotics. They are available for hire when husband wants to murder wife and ...
Abu Ghraib: The Back Story
Washington Post, United States - Jul 12, 2008
Saddam quickly ordered all prisoners released, realizing he couldn't afford widespread anarchy while warring with the Great Satan. ...
The Crown Prince of Crime is an insanely good Batman villain
Miramichi Leader, Canada - Jul 8, 2008
He was so evil he was actually scheduled to be killed off, but the editors changed their minds at the last minute believing the character too good to kill. ...
Trapped Ashes (2006)
Real Movie News - Jul 23, 2008
Once inside, the group is allowed to explore with caution, quickly, however, each and every member finds their way to the a large chamber in the center of ...
Terminally ill Lawrence man, family unharmed after 3-hour standoff
Eagle Tribune, MA - Jul 6, 2008
The man, who suffers from dementia and liver cancer, was taken to Lawrence General Hospital for treatment and evaluation. He does not face criminal charges, ...
Christopher Nolan's ambitious, frustrating epic pushes Batman to ...
New Republic, DC - Jul 17, 2008
Indeed the whole film occasionally feels like an experiment in entropy, a universe in which even the best laid plans--Nolan's perhaps included--are quickly ...
Drugs to reverse Alzheimer's disease prove elusive
Los Angeles Times, CA - Jul 28, 2008
We need to move very quickly." The setbacks have not convinced scientists that the disease is incurable. Dozens of other experimental medications are in the ...
Source: Google News

HSerious and Complex IllnessH in Quality Improvement and Policy Reform for End-of-Life Care -
J Lynn, JH Forlini - J Gen Intern Med, 2001 - Blackwell Synergy
... ago of infections, accidents, and organ system failures that usually kill quickly. ...
of heart failure, obstructive lung disease, stroke, dementia, or cancer (C ...

Dementia Drugs Demystified: What to expect-and not to expect-from Alzheimer's medications. -
DAN HURLEY - Neurology Now, 2006 - neurologynow.com
... Dementia Drugs Demystified: What to expect-and not to ... But I'm always quick to point
out to ... do cholinesterase inhibitors-glutamate, which can kill brain cells. ...

Healthy, Happy, and Hopeful: Complimentary Care for Dementia
M TRUSCOTT - acqjournal.com
... metals from my body, and to kill viruses and ... a person living with the frustrations
of dementia stay optimistic ... have to learn how to deal quickly and effectively ...
-

fib#{248} tracteant?Extracte.
TM Women, DLM Severe - American Journal of Psychiatry - Am Psychiatric Assoc
... required z6 cc. per kilogram to kill the animal. ... The cases of dementia prcox and
the ... toxins may quickly reach its maximum point while the urine at the same ...

… metabolism and brain disease: Is metabolic deficiency the proximate cause of Alzheimer dementia? -
JP Blass - Journal of Neuroscience Research, 2001 - doi.wiley.com
... Alzheimer Dementia? ... func- tion on continuous, efficient utilization of oxygen quickly
led investigators ... enough to have any physiological effect would kill cells ...

Recombinant apoptin multimers kill tumor cells but are nontoxic and epitope-shielded in a normal- … -
YH Zhang, SR Leliveld, K Kooistra, C Molenaar, JL … - Experimental Cell Research, 2003 - Elsevier
... of the MBP?Apoptin quickly migrated into the nucleus and induced apoptosis. Because
microinjection of the control protein MBP failed to kill the cells, such ...

An Investigation of Moral Judgement in Frontotemporal Dementia. -
MF Mendez, E Anderson, JS Shapira - Cognitive and Behavioral Neurology, 2005 - cogbehavneurol.com
... To facilitate administration to dementia patients, these vignettes ... set of tracks
where it will kill one person ... wheel of a runaway trolley quickly approaching a ...

My mother, the smoker -
K Levy - British Medical Journal, 2007 - mh.bmj.com
... 17 Mom?s doctors are worried about stroke as she already has dementia. ... Smoking
doesn?t kill quickly and smokers live long enough to "transmit" (reproduce). ...
-

119. Why Doesn?ta Specific Antibody Kill Spirochetes? Expression of dbpA by B. burgdorferi in …
HAA Therapy - doi.wiley.com
... abrupt Wallerian de- generation that quickly destroys the ... Olmesartan in treating
diseases that kill the spinal ... Although SCA 17 involves dementia and cerebellar ...

Colorado to Kill Hundreds of Deer to Stop Disease
WHOSGCT Polio - Clinical Infectious Diseases, 2002 - UChicago Press
... much higher levels of mental impairment and dementia in drug ... Colorado to Kill Hundreds
of Deer to Stop Disease. ... the deadly disease can spread quickly, about 40 ...

Source: Google Scholar
 

   
   

A Dementia That Can Kill Quickly

September 15, 2005 08:40:42 PM PST
By Ed Edelson
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, Sept. 15 (HealthDay News) -- A family confronted with Alzheimer's disease may well believe that it is the worst thing that can happen, but neurologists are describing a related brain condition that is even more troubling.

It's called frontotemporal dementia, named after the parts of the brain that it attacks -- the upper lobes of the front part of the organ. Alzheimer's, by comparison, affects the entire brain.

And while people with Alzheimer's disease suffer progressive loss of memory and ability to function, those with frontotemporal dementia may act wildly and bizarrely, veering into theft, sexual deviancy and other uncontrolled acts, according to experts.

"We know that many of these patients are said to be crazy and wind up in jail rather than in a hospital," said Dr. John Q. Trojanowski, director of the University of Pennsylvania Institute on Aging.

And the condition is a killer, according to a study in the current issue of the journal Neurology to which Trojanowski contributed. The study found that people who had frontotemporal dementia died much faster than those with Alzheimer's disease.

The 395 Alzheimer's disease patients died 8.7 years after diagnosis. The average survival time for the 177 people with frontotemporal dementia was three years. Some Alzheimer's patients lived as long as 11.8 years after diagnosis, while the longest survival time for those with the other condition was 5.7 years, the study found.

There are several possible explanations for the difference, said Dr. Erik D. Roberson, a research scientist at the University of California, San Francisco's Gladstone Institute of Neurological Disease, who took part in the transcontinental study and was lead author of the journal report.

One reason is that people with frontotemporal dementia are likely to get Lou Gehrig's disease, a fatal neurological disorder in its own right, Roberson said. Another is that "the patients' withdrawal and social barriers might lead them to be institutionalized early in the course of the disease, and there might be changes in quality of medical care they get," he said.

The most tantalizing possibility is that the tangles of tau protein found in the brains of patients with Alzheimer's disease might have a protective function, Roberson said. Frontotemporal dementia patients who survived longest were those who had tau-positive inclusions in their brains; those with no such inclusions died fastest, he said.

"Are these inclusions part of a problem or a brain's attempt to solve a problem?" Roberson said. "Some data in Huntington's disease indicate that tau-positive inclusions are a good thing that protect the brain."

Trojanowski has an even simpler explanation: It is simply the nature of frontotemporal dementia to be fast-moving, just as some forms of cancer are more malignant and kill more quickly, he said.

There is no immediate medical application for the finding, Roberson said. But if there are trials of a treatment in the future, patients would have to be tested more frequently than is done in trials of Alzheimer's disease, he said.

The possibility of such treatments and such trials exists, Trojanowski said, "because if we know what is broken, we can try to fix it."

But the most important message is for families of those people diagnosed with frontotemporal dementia, he said. In simplest terms, "they have to plan for what is now an inevitable death."

It is one of those facts that has to be accepted, Trojanowski said. "I would want to know if my dad or mother or wife is to die in five years," he said. "There are different arrangements than if they will live for 10 years."

There is a possible application of the finding about tau inclusions, said Dr. David M. Blass, director of the Frontotemporal Dementia Clinic at Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions. Studies to detect those inclusions could give information about the rate at which the condition would progress, he said.

"The importance of this study is that it looks at a very large group of patients that goes beyond any individual's clinical experience," Blass said. "For families with this condition, knowledge of prognosis is exceptionally important. Any improvement in the knowledge we can give families is of value in planning and making peace with the conditions of their loved ones."

More information

Frontotemporal dementia is fully explained by Johns Hopkins University.

 

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