Saturday, June 7, 2014

What is Alzheimer's disease? Causes, symptoms and treatment

Alzheimer's disease is a neurological disorder in which the death of brain cells causes memory loss and cognitive decline. A neurodegenerative type of dementia, the disease starts mild and gets progressively worse.
Learn here about the brain changes thought to cause Alzheimer's disease and the signs and symptoms that result in mental confusion. A number of tests are used to diagnose the disorder and treatments are available to help improve symptoms and quality of life.
Some of the information about Alzheimer's disease also applies to other types of cognitive decline. See our broader page about dementia - you will also find links to useful parts of that page in some of the sections about Alzheimer's below.

How common is Alzheimer's disease?

In the US, the most recent census has enabled researchers to give estimates of how many people have Alzheimer's disease. In 2010, some 4.7 million people of 65 years of age and older were living with Alzheimer's disease in the US.1
The 2013 statistical report from the Alzheimer's Association gives a proportion of the population affected - just over a tenth of people in the over-65 age group have the disease in the US. In the over-85s, the proportion goes up to about a third.2
As our dementia page outlines, there is a handful of different types, but Alzheimer's disease is the problem behind most cases of memory loss and cognitive decline:2
  • The Alzheimer's Association says it accounts for between 60% and 80% of all cases of dementia.
Vascular dementia, which is caused by stroke not Alzheimer's, is the second most common type of dementia.

What causes Alzheimer's disease?

Like all types of dementia, Alzheimer's is caused by brain cell death.3 It is a neurodegenerative disease, which means there is progressive brain cell death that happens over a course of time.
The total brain size shrinks with Alzheimer's - the tissue has progressively fewer nerve cells and connections.3,4
brain neurons
Nerve cells (neurons) in the brain. In Alzheimer's, there are microscopic 'plaques' and 'tangles' between and within brain cells.
While they cannot be seen or tested in the living brain affected by Alzheimer's disease, postmortem/autopsy will always show tiny inclusions in the nerve tissue, called plaques and tangles:3,4
  • Plaques are found between the dying cells in the brain - from the build-up of a protein called beta-amyloid (you may hear the term "amyloid plaques").
  • The tangles are within the brain neurons - from a disintegration of another protein, called tau.
For a detailed visualization of what goes on in the Alzheimer's disease process, progressing from the normal brain to increasing dementia changes, the Alzheimer's Association has produced a journey of 16 slides. See the illustrations: Inside the brain: an interactive tour.
The abnormal protein clumps, inclusions, in the brain tissue are always present with the disease, but there could be another underlying process that is actually causing the Alzheimer's - scientists are not yet sure.3
This sort of change in brain nerves is also witnessed in other disorders,3 and researchers want to find out more than just that there are protein abnormalities - they also want to know how these develop so that a cure or prevention might be discovered.

Risk factors

Some things are more commonly associated with Alzheimer's disease - not seen so often in people without the disorder. These factors may therefore have some direct connection. Some are preventable or modifiable factors (for example, reducing the risk of diabetes or heart disease may in turn cut the risk of dementia).
If researchers gain more understanding of the risk factors, or scientifically prove any "cause" relationships for Alzheimer's, this could help to find ways to prevent it or develop treatments.
Risk factors associated with Alzheimer's disease include:5,6

    Unavoidable risk factors
  • Age - the disorder is more likely in older people, and a greater proportion of over-85-year-olds have it than of over-65s.2
  • Family history (inheritance of genes) - having Alzheimer's in the family is associated with higher risk. This is the second biggest risk factor after age.7
  • Having a certain gene (the apolipoprotein E or APOE gene) puts a person, depending on their specific genetics, at three to eight times more risk than a person without the gene.6 Numerous other genes have been found to be associated with Alzheimer's disease, even recently (see developments below).7
  • Being female (more women than men are affected).

  • Potentially avoidable or modifiable factors
  • Factors that increase blood vessel (vascular) risk - including diabetes, high cholesterol and high blood pressure. (These also increase the risk of stroke, which itself can lead to another type of dementia.)
  • Low educational and occupational attainment.
  • Prior head injury. (While a traumatic brain injury does not necessarily lead to Alzheimer's, some research links have been drawn, with increasing risk tied to the severity of trauma history.)8
  • Sleep disorders (the breathing problem sleep apnea, for example).
  • Estrogen hormone replacement therapy.

Early-onset Alzheimer's disease

Genetics are behind early-onset familial Alzheimer's disease, which presents typically between the ages of 30 and 60 years and affects people who have a family history of it.
Due to one of three inherited genes, it is also known as young-onset, and it is uncommon - accounting for under 5% of all Alzheimer's cases.6,9
The Alzheimer's Association says in its early-onset information that it can sometimes be "a long and frustrating process" to get this diagnosis confirmed since doctors do not expect to find Alzheimer's in younger people. For the younger age groups, doctors will look for other dementia causes first.
Healthcare professionals, the nonprofit says, may also "incorrectly attribute" symptoms to stress and so on, or may not agree on the diagnosis.10
Recent developments in understanding causes and risk factors from MNT news
Eleven new Alzheimer's risk genes have been identified. The findings, published in Nature Genetics in October 2013, mean the total number of genes found to be associated with Alzheimer's disease was 21. Large research collaborations resulted in the breakthrough to help understand genetic factors behind the dementia. Just over 70,000 individuals were analyzed, comparing the genes of 25,580 people who had Alzheimer's against 48,466 healthy controls, enabling the scientists to pinpoint genes that may put people at higher risk.
Alzheimer's onset could be triggered by sleep disturbances - Chronic sleep problems can inflame a number of health problems, from widespread pain to speeding up cancer. Though sleep disturbances have been observed in people with Alzheimer's disease, whether this is a cause or effect has been unknown. Now, researchers say individuals with chronic sleep disruptions could face earlier onset of Alzheimer's. Their pre-clinical study was published in the journal Neurobiology of Aging.

Signs and symptoms

The information in this section connects closely to some of that about tests and diagnosis below because symptoms noticed by patients, or people close to them, are exactly the same signs that healthcare professionals look for during testing.
Symptoms can be diagnosed at any stage of Alzheimer's dementia and the progression through the stages of the disease is monitored after an initial diagnosis, too, when the developing symptoms dictate how care is managed.
Of course, the very nature of the symptoms can be confusing for both a patient and the people around them, with different levels of severity. For this reason, and because symptoms could signal any of a number of diagnoses, it is always worthwhile seeing a doctor.
For doctors to make an initial diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease, they must first be satisfied that there is dementia - guidelines spell out what dementia consists of. It involves cognitive or behavioral symptoms that show a decline from previous levels of "functioning and performing" and interfere with ability "to function at work or at usual activities."11
The cognitive decline is in at least TWO of the five symptom areas listed below (from guidelines jointly produced by the National Institute on Aging and the Alzheimer's Association):11
Wife looks after her elderly husband with alzheimer's disease
1. Worsened ability to take in and remember new information, for example:
  • "Repetitive questions or conversations
  • Misplacing personal belongings
  • Forgetting events or appointments
  • Getting lost on a familiar route."
2. Impairments to reasoning, complex tasking, exercising judgment:
  • "Poor understanding of safety risks
  • Inability to manage finances
  • Poor decision-making ability
  • Inability to plan complex or sequential activities."
3. Impaired visuospatial abilities (but not, for example, due to eye sight problems):
  • "Inability to recognize faces or common objects or to find objects in direct view
  • Inability to operate simple implements, or orient clothing to the body."
4. Impaired speaking, reading and writing:
  • "Difficulty thinking of common words while speaking, hesitations
  • Speech, spelling, and writing errors."
5. Changes in personality and behavior, for example:
  • Out-of-character mood changes, including agitation; less interest, motivation or initiative; apathy; social withdrawal
  • Loss of empathy
  • Compulsive, obsessive or socially unacceptable behavior.
Once the number and severity of these example symptoms confirm dementia, the best certainty that they are because of Alzheimer's disease is given by:
  • A gradual onset "over months to years" rather than hours or days (the case with some other problems)
  • A marked worsening of the individual person's normal level of cognition in particular areas.11
The most common presentation marking Alzheimer's dementia is where symptoms of memory loss are the most prominent, especially in the area of learning and recalling new information. But the initial presentation can also be one of mainly language problems, in which case the greatest symptom is struggling to find the right words.11
If visuospatial deficits are most prominent, meanwhile, these would include inability to recognize objects and faces, to comprehend separate parts of a scene at once (simultanagnosia), and a type of difficulty with reading text (alexia). Finally, the most prominent deficits in "executive dysfunction" would be to do with reasoning, judgment and problem-solving.11

Stages of Alzheimer's disease

The progression of Alzheimer's can be broken down into three basic stages:12
  • Preclinical (no signs or symptoms yet)
  • Mild cognitive impairment
  • Dementia.
The Alzheimer's Association has broken this down further, describing seven stages along a continuum of cognitive decline based on symptom severity - from a state of no impairment, through mild and moderate decline, and eventually reaching "very severe decline."
The association has published the seven stages online.13 It is not usually until stage four that a diagnosis is clear - here it is called mild or early-stage Alzheimer's disease, and "a careful medical interview should be able to detect clear-cut symptoms in several areas."

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