Neurodegenative Disease Support

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This community is a gathering place for all those affected by neurodegenerative diseases. Patients, family, friends and caregivers are welcome. Share info, ask questions, or vent about your day. Whatever you'd like to talk about, we're here to listen.

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/neurodegdissupport
 
 

From their "about us" page: "'Being Patient' is an editorially independent news and community platform that aims to create clarity around complex health issues and be a trusted, accurate source of information for the people impacted by a disease."

Some good, apparently well-vetted info on Alzheimer's and related dementias. Emphasis on personal narratives from people with dementia, and from caregivers.

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extreme young onset dementia (self.neurodegdissupport)
submitted 9 months ago by amrraadrafat to c/neurodegdissupport
 
 

hello i am officially diagnosed with early young onset dementia probably AD at 23 years old male, any help?

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TLDR: This list does not automatically mean someone has dementia—other causes may include drugs, stress, mental illness, or other medical conditions. Seek medical help before jumping to conclusions.

  1. Apathy: nothing is interesting.
  2. Affective dysregulation: sad, anxious, crabby.
  3. Lack of impulse control: frustrated, angry, irrationally stubborn, obsessive.
  4. Social inappropriateness: shockingly uninhibited or rude in words, deeds.
  5. Abnormal perceptions or thoughts: suspicious, hearing or seeing things that aren’t there.

I wish I’d had this article 10 years ago. 20/20 hindsight, my partner in her early 50s went through years of prodromal (beginning signs of) Alzheimer’s before receiving a diagnosis at age 61. The list is scary-accurate.

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A very beautifully moving, articulate first-person piece by Greg O'Brien, a journalist with Alzheimer's.

I cannot give you a TLDR, because this piece offers the texture, the experience, of what it's like to live with Alzheimer's. He says, "when the brain fails: write and speak from the heart, the place of the soul."

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TLDR: Some studies on what causes Alzheimer’s disease are examining the link between the early presence of one of the hallmark chemical brain chemicals (plaques—or clumped buildup—of the protein beta-amyloid) and later development of the disease.

People 18 to 65 who experience high stress, anxiety and depression seem to have greater amounts of this marker protein, and statistically greater risk of developing Alzheimer’s in later years.

Does untreated mental illness tend to cause higher rates of Alzheimer’s? Does impending Alzheimer’s (accompanied by increased beta-amyloid) cause mental health issues? Can early intervention lessen the risk of developing Alzheimer's later? Is the connection mere coincidence?

The cause-and-effect connection is still unclear. (Caveat: No, if you’re depressed, this does not mean you’re headed for dementia-land.)

I can attest to my own experience with my partner, who was officially diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer’s at age 61. She had about a decade’s worth of whack-a-doodle mental health issues prior to the diagnosis. None of the conventional therapies (drugs, counseling) seemed to work.

We know she had a hereditary predisposition (her father and 2 aunts had some form of dementia). We know she had a childhood that caused anxiety and depression. Perhaps it was a snowball effect—the biochemistry of mental health issues poking and prodding the genetic component into action. Or perhaps the mental health and Alzheimer's symptoms merely overlapped.

Some further reading on current research into links among beta-amyloid, mental illness and Alzheimer’s:

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8534102/

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25629787/

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34877794/

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Update on me (self.neurodegdissupport)
submitted 1 year ago by ZenGrammy to c/neurodegdissupport
 
 

I'm sorry I've been not available for a few weeks. My mom became increasingly unable to eat her food properly over the last few months, and as we hit September, started to refuse food or drinks of all kinds. This was not unexpected as her Huntington's Disease progressed, but it really threw me emotionally when her nursing home confirmed we were at that point.

Around two weeks ago, I was asked if I wanted to consider a feeding tube for her, and given that she had known this was a possibility and made her opinion on the matter VERY clear, I said "No."

I was able to use her Neurocare Unit room as a hospice of sorts, as we settled in for 7 days of her refusing food and fluids, and only saying yes to medication for her pain. She was very focused and peaceful through most of it. It was obviously a very difficult time, but I am honored to have been able to fulfill the promise I made to give her a comfortable death with family at her side when she chooses to let her life be done. My mother passed away last Friday at 11:35 pm, at the age of 66. My journey with her had many highs and lows, but my love had no limits.

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Today, September 21, 2023 is “World Alzheimer's Day… a global effort to raise awareness and challenge the stigma around Alzheimer's disease and other dementia.” https://www.alz.org/about/awareness-initiatives/world-alzheimers-day

To celebrate, I want to share a new book I’m a few chapters into: Travelers to Unimaginable Lands: Stories of Dementia, the Caregiver, and the Human Brain, by Dasha Kiper (Penguin 2023).

For me, it’s already on my “you MUST read this if you’re a dementia caregiver” list, next to The 36-Hour Day: A Family Guide to Caring for People Who Have Alzheimer Disease and Other Dementias, by Nancy L. Mace and Peter V. Rabins (7th ed., Johns Hopkins U, 2021).

I do a lot of reading to understand my partner’s Alzheimer’s. I’m far from expert, but I can talk about beta-amyloid, tau tangles and acetylcholinesterase inhibitors; what sundowning is, why benzodiazepines might not be a good idea, and what to do if a person with dementia gets argumentative. But here’s a book about me, and why my brain as a caregiver for someone with dementia sometimes feels like that fried-egg “just say no to drugs” commercial (for those who want a nostalgia kick: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8gaxWcHkbpI).

Travelers uses a nuanced understanding of how memory is stored and retrieved, along with snippets from literature (Borges, Kafka) and case studies, to answer the question “If I’m not the one with dementia, why am I feeling like I’m crazy?”

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This article concerns one of the part-owners (19% share) of the skilled nursing facility my partner with Alzheimer's is in. His name is Ephram Lahasky. The place is Comprehensive Rehabilitation and Nursing Center at Williamsville, NY. (I call it the Roach Motel.)

The article notes that he owns a similarly-named nursing home conglomerate in western Pennsylvania. That conglomerate is trying to sell off properties.

In a nutshell, the conglomerate has cheated workers, patients and Medicare/Medicaid. It's trying to sell off properties before a judgment is rendered in the lawsuits, so it won't be liable. These are allegations only, not established fact—but yeah, where there's smoke…

Beware placing anyone in a nursing home where this guy is among the owners. Many nursing homes are a shady exercises in profiteering.

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“Why Neurologists Are Calling Quest Rapid Alzheimer’s Test ‘an Absolute Catastrophe’”

TLDR by a real person:

Quest Diagnostics has released its Quest AD-Detect™ blood test for $400.

Problems:

  1. The test has a high rate of false positives—29% false positives.

  2. Tests are easy to misinterpret. They only tell you if you MIGHT get Alzheimer’s… with a 29% false positive rate.

  3. The test looks for beta-amyloid proteins, one hallmark of Alzheimer’s. But the buildup of these proteins hasn’t been studied in a large enough cross-section of the population to lead to any conclusions.

  4. Symptoms that look a lot like Alzheimer’s can be caused by a wide range of other things. If you misinterpret the test as meaning you have Alzheimer’s, you could miss some other serious conditions.

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The Dutch “dementia village,” De Hogeweyk, discussed in a paper delivered at the annual meeting of the Society of Architectural Historians:

https://www.e-flux.com/architecture/treatment/410336/deception-and-design-the-rise-of-the-dementia-village/

An Al Jazeera video on a care home in the northern Thai city of Chiang Mai:

https://www.aljazeera.com/program/101-east/2020/5/1/thailands-last-resort/

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I can't believe September has crept up on us already! I went on a road trip with my husband and my best friend a few weeks ago. The car ride was 10 hours long. I can't drive anymore, so hubby has to do all of it. I had to put many pillows around and behind me, and also ban air conditioning in the car unless the internal temperature was over 75 because it hurts so much when the cold air blows directly on my body. I enjoyed the trip and visiting with my friends. I hadn't seen them much at all since Covid started because it's often not safe and they don't put me at risk just for a visit.

Sometimes I'm amazed that my husband has stuck with me for so long given the fact that he would happily live in a refrigerator and I would happily live at over 80 degrees all the time. We make it work by having separate bedrooms. It's very important when you are "thermostatically incompatible" like we are.

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There are some great blogs written by both caregivers and those who experience dementia here.

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Aphasia (www.beingpatient.com)
submitted 1 year ago by [email protected] to c/neurodegdissupport
 
 

TLDR (by a real person!):

Aphasia is the inability to put one’s thoughts into the right words—you know what you want to say, but brain damage (traumatic brain injury, tumors, dementia, etc.) derail conversations. It can be isolating and maddeningly frustrating.

How to talk to someone with aphasia

  1. Acknowledge capacity. People with aphasia remain smart, capable—but there’s a short-circuit in expressing thoughts.

  2. Partner up. It takes two to talk. With a few strategies, you can ease the way for satifying conversations. Keys: • Speak normally—tone, volume. • Acknowledge stumbling blocks with respect, rather than ignoring them. • Write down (or repeat) key words to keep chat on track. • Draw, or use gestures; point; use more body language. • Use yes/no questions to confirm understanding. • Sum up main points at intervals.

  3. Respect the human right to communicate. Written or spoken language is a hardwired need.

  4. Ensure accessibility. Make sure speed, loudness, complexity of information (etc.) allow for comprehension, participation.

  5. Include people in conversations and events. Don’t leave people out because you assume they might feel uncomfortable. Offer choices and they will tell you.

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"Researchers at the Francis Crick Institute and UCL have shown that hundreds of proteins and mRNA molecules are found in the wrong place in nerve cells affected by Motor Neuron Disease (MND), also known as Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS).…

[N]ew research published today in Neuron shows that the problem is much broader. This 'mislocalization' affects many more proteins than first thought, especially those involved in RNA binding. The mislocalization extends to mRNAs too, molecules that deliver instructions to make proteins from the DNA in the nucleus."

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Dementia / Alzheimer's Medication Class Action

"A $56 Million Class Action Settlement has been settled with pharmaceutical companies that manufacture and market certain Alzheimer's disease medications. The class action lawsuit alleged that pharma companies including Actavis, Merz, Teva, Dr. Reddy's, and Wockhardt conspired intentionally to keep generic versions of Alzheimer's medication off the shelves in order to drive up the cost of Namenda Alzheimer's medication. In the United States, the generic version of Namenda Alzheimer's disease drug is also known as Memantine."

Page contains a link to join the class action suit.

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I feel like this is a common problem in neuro diseases. If only we could get an earlier diagnosis, we would have fewer people seriously disabled by these diseases at a young age, while they visit their doctors over and over begging for some sort of help.

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Racial disparities in drug trials, and disparities in overall medical care, among other factors, make the recently-approved Alzheimer's break-through drug lecanemab less likely to benefit African Americans.

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"The Vanishing Family." This is a "gift" link, so you shouldn't hit a paywall; let me know if you have any problems.

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So my partner with Alzheimer’s is in a skilled nursing facility. She wouldn’t walk or exercise for several years; fell repeatedly; and after a stint in the ER, flunked out of rehab. She’s now in long-term care on Medicaid, in a place which I will call Roach Motel because (you know) “roaches check in, but they don’t check out.” They want her money. I am physically unable to care for her at home 24/7.

I don’t know that I could have gotten her into a better place than Roach Motel from a hospital ER. The ER was adamant: “we need to kick her out NOW, because she’s taking up space and we can’t do anything more for her. You have two choices, and they’re both wretched. Roach Motel is slightly less wretched.”

I didn’t know much about Roach Motel, but I document here how I was able to find the skeletons in their closet, in hopes someone with more time to consider can avoid voluntarily selecting a toxic waste dump for their loved one. Presumably, this roadmap will work for assisted living, memory care, and other types of care facilities too. This strategy works for the US; I believe it should be transferrable to other countries.

Yes, ideally you should visit, do the sniff test (does eau-d’-urine waft through the halls?), ask questions (do you treat patients with respect?), sample the food (it’s all institutional, but is there some semblance of palatable, recognizable food items?) However, good places will be honest, and garbage dumps will show-and-tell you what they want you to see. They will appear similar. How to tell the difference?

You can coax a lot out of online searches.

First, start with the facility’s full proper name; add city and state if necessary. Search online. You can use Google’s search engine for this first part—but for later searches, I suggest something like DuckDuckGo. Reason: some search engines accept pay to promote good reviews, suppress bad ones. It’s called SEO, “search engine optimization.” You want to see what they will pay not to show you.

Your first search results will show you the puff pieces: the glossy-brochure language, promotional articles, glowing (likely paid) customer reviews.

Next, add the following to your search string: "Medicare Medicaid." It doesn’t matter whether you have either in your healthcare portfolio. Both programs review and rate facilities based on complex metrics. Scroll through the resulting pages to see what the criteria mean, what they are based on. Pay some attention to consistency of ratings—if one month, they are at 5 stars (out of 5), the next month jump to 3, back up to 4, and a month later drop to 2, then they’ve got issues.

Next, use the facility name and add strings such as "complaints," or "reviews." The Yelp-style ratings system will always skew to extremes; they elicit comments from people who are either deliriously happy, or inconsolably angry. Take both with a grain of salt. Sometimes, a patient’s medical issues will overwhelm even the most meticulous of care, and that can leave loved ones looking to assign blame. But if you see a bunch of ambulance-chasers boasting of success “suing the pants off” of your facility, it’s not a good sign.

Next, using facility name, switch over from the “general” tab of your search engine to “news,” and sort by “most recent.” What does recognized journalistic reportage have to say about your facility? You may find reports of union strikes, egregious heath and safety violations. Or you may find the C-suite honcho or top manager bragging, prognosticating a bright future for happy patients with excellent care. Are the honcho’s comments realistic? Does it appear he or she thinks an increase in Medicare or Medicaid per-diem payments will fish them out of their current financial morass? (Ha! Dream on!) Read between the lines; why is this piece of reporting “news”? What is the honcho responding to? Bottom line, what pending financial instabilities do you see? (If they have problems looming, those problems won’t be reported; they’re speculation, not yet actual news. Make some intelligent guesses of your own.)

Finally, use the facility name and add "owner", searching with the “general” tab. The dirty little secret of most nursing homes is that they are for-profit entities, and that they are owned by a handful of people who are very well-off, and who bring family and friends into the business with them. Whatever their values, they will likely be applied to (and visible in) other facilities in which owners have s share.

From what I’ve seen, there may be a dozen or so owners. Each one owns a percentage share of your target institution, and a percentage share of many other institutions across the country. They’ve got empires going. One I read about purchased a whole airline for his son to play at running—where did that money come from?

Pick a few names from the top of the list, and start online searching those names. (If names are common, you may have to toss in a few qualifiers like “nursing.”) The people at the top have the biggest percentages. Chances are, you’ll start seeing other names appearing on the sites you turn up—the other co-owner investors listed as owners.

What kinds of complaints, fines, lawsuits, violations, fraud, allegations or similar shenanigans do you see? The owners of your target facility almost certainly have shares in other facilities that have done bad enough things to become internet-searchable. If your target facility is not currently under the gun, that’s not necessarily good news. Chances are excellent they simply have not been caught and publicized yet. An owner of multiple facilities is not going to treat your target facility any differently than all the others they own.

And for 50 extra bonus points: set up a Google Alert. Search online for "Google alerts." Sign in to your Google account. In the dialog box “search for,” enter the full name of your target institution. My preferences from drop down menus (set to default unless otherwise indicated): how often—once a day; region—US; how many—all results. (If you get irrelevant info, you can modify these settings later).

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Who knows... maybe there is hope that some of us will suffer less than we expected to.

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I was on Farcebook earlier today, and caught not one, but two ads using the hashtag #dementiaawareness. (I was looking for something else.) I reported them to Farcebook as lies, and they disappeared, so sadly I can't share screenshots.

But basically, y'all know the drill: "Did you know you can cure dementia with this one simple thing?" I had to double-check—yup, it was "sponsored content." Someone paid to put it there.

Clicked through to a long rambling bunch of yadda yadda, coming from a Very Important MD with Very Big Credentials (you can read that in tRump's voice if you wish…), who has seen through the falsehoods of conventional therapies. Yes, all of the side-effects which the (white, male, pretty-boy) doctor lists for donepezil are truthful. Similar padding and truthful (but partial) information about other established medical interventions.

After pages and pages of half-truths, we get to the point: all you have to do to permanently reverse and cure dementia is buy our cannabis gummies! Here is a picture of Jane Doe with dementia, and here is a picture of Jane Doe after just one week taking our gummies! Wow!!!

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Alz.org is the website for the US based Alzheimer’s Association. They focus primarily on Alzheimer’s, but also contain some material on other forms of dementia.

The site interface is designed to be easy to navigate for those who are not medical professionals, but digging through some of the menus will get you to refereed journal articles and other professional resources, as well as granular suggestions for caregivers seeking to offer dignified, appropriate levels of support for loved ones.

Of special interest: their phone hotline, available 24/7. From my experience, they seem to have a vast phone-tree of specialist consultants—so you can call in to vent, ask for tips and strategies, or to get pointed in the right direction for independent research.

I was especially impressed with their ability to get me connected to local resources—lists of adult daycare, nursing homes & memory care, checklists on how to evaluate offerings, and so on. So often, I’ve asked for help through insurance company reps, or doctors’ offices, or dug up stuff myself online—only to find it’s outdated or contains information that isn’t useful.

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