Alzheimer's Disease Information Is Crucial In Managing It


Problems that come with the Alzheimer's disease are very broad. If you would like to know, where they come from and why do they happen, you need to understand what it does to the body. It is a neurodegenerative disease. That means that it destroys the nerve system and from that it also follows that the patient is not able to control the muscles in the body. In this article we will give you information on Alzheimer's disease and what it does to the human brain.

There are three important parts of your brain, called the cerebrum, the cerebellum and the brain stem. The biggest part of the brains is the cerebrum that is involved in thinking, remembering, acting and feeling. The cerebellum controls coordination and balance and is located at the back of your scull just under the cerebrum. The brain stem is the connection to the spinal cord and is located underneath the cerebrum and in front of cerebellum. It controls the automatic functions of your body like breathing and heart beating. Another important part of the brain is the outer 'shell', the wrinkled part of your brain. It is divided into specific sections that are specialized to interpret different functions of the body. Some of them interpret sensations, signs, other allow you to think or store all your memories or control your movement. If we speak about the theory of the brain, we also need to mention, that the left part of the brain, controls the right part of the body and vice versa.

The real work in the brain is done by the individual cells. Brain contains about 100 billion nerve cells with branches that are connected at more than 100 trillion points. The whole system is also called the neutron forest. The information or what you think are the small signals that travel through the forest.

The health problems that the patients feel are connected to the nerve cell death in the brain caused by the Alzheimer disease. Some of the problems are very similar to the normal aging process but are much more extensive, when a patient has it. The tissue loss caused by it makes the brain shrink dramatically. Next to that, the disease makes the cortex shrivel up and it affects areas involved into thinking and remembering. The hippocampus, a part of the brain that is crucial to make new memories is most damaged. On the micro level the nerve cells are dying and the count of them decreases dramatically. Also, the transport of the proteins between brain cells is minimized or stopped, and because the cells do not get all the substances, they eventually die. The process starts off very slowly, so that the first changes in the brain can be seen up to twenty years before the Alzheimer's is diagnosed. The moderate stage of the disease can last from two to up to ten years, and the severe stage normally lasts from one to five years. Information on Alzheimer's is crucial not only for the patient but his near and dear ones for its proper management.

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