Individual and Family Discount Dental Plans, Affordable
Dental Care Starting at $79.95 a Year!
1-888-632-5353 
M-F 8 AM - 9 PM EST 

Find Plans in Your Area
 
ZIP code
 

Find Dentists in Your Area
 
ZIP code
 
Dentist last name
(optional)
 




you are here: DentalPlans.com > Dental Health Articles > HealthnewsDigest.com > Number of Patients with Dementia on the Rise

Number of Patients with Dementia on the Rise
Updated: 7/6/2009 9:00:37 AM
 
(HealthNewsDigest.com) - ANN ARBOR, Mich. - At 81, Alberta Sabin’s mind is not as sharp as it used to be, and she knows it.
She frequently misplaces common items, forgets names and appointments, some of the most frustrating aspects of memory loss, she says.

“I had been looking for my cell phone for three days and would you believe I found it laying on the counter in plain sight?,” Sabin says. “There it was and I thought why didn’t I see it before?”

It is that frustration that motivated Sabin to participate in U-M sponsored research designed to better diagnose and treat dementia before it escalates.

Sabin is one of millions of Americans who experience memory loss and may eventually be diagnosed with dementia.

“This is an explosive disease,” says Sid Gilman, M.D., director of the Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center at University of Michigan Health System, who conducts research with Sabin and others in her community. “It’s a horrible disease that robs people of their humanity. They forget their families and friends.”

Roughly 50 percent of people who reach 85 will become demented, according to studies conducted by investigators at Rush Medical Center in Chicago.

By age 100, the number spikes to 60 percent. Of those who develop dementia, roughly 60 percent will prove to have Alzheimer’s disease. It’s predicted that the current number of patients with Alzheimer’s disease in the United States is roughly 5 million. By the year 2050, it will grow to about 30 million, presenting a significant financial burden to the healthcare system.

Gilman and other researchers at the Michigan Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center (MADRC), have a keen interest in patients like Sabin. The center first received grant support from the National Institutes of Health in 1989 and has continued to receive funding since.

Researchers at the MADRC have so far studied 80 patients in a project that has been going on for four years on the diagnosis of Alzheimer's at the earliest sign of cognitive dysfunction. Researchers would ultimately like to evaluate 120.

One of the goals of the research is to determine the best tool for the early diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease: PET scans or clinical evaluations. In addition to Alzheimer’s disease, there are other possible diagnoses with early onset cognitive impairment, including multiple strokes, frontotemporal dementia, corticobasal degeneration, and the cognitive disorder associated with Parkinson’s disease, which is termed dementia with Lewy bodies.

“The earliest possible treatment for Alzheimer’s disease would be to the patient’s greatest advantage,” Gilman says.

PET, or positron emission tomography, is an imaging study that allows doctors to evaluate the use of certain substances by the brain. Normally, the brain uses glucose as a fuel. Using PET scans, doctors can image the amount of glucose used by the brain to determine whether there’s a difference in brain use by the frontal lobe, temporal lobe or the parietal lobe.

PET gives the ability to make predictions as to those individuals who will go on from mild impairment of memory to developing Alzheimer’s disease. These patients may then qualify to participate in clinical trials for medications that treat Alzheimer’s. Studies with glucose are being supplemented by PET scans that can image beta-amyloid, one of the abnormal proteins in the brain in Alzheimer’s disease.

Sabin, whose mother and grandmother had dementia, is participating in U-M research that will help researchers diagnose and treat the illness earlier in life.

“I have trouble remembering names and the most frustrating is when they are names of people I know really well, I just can’t bring the name to the surface,” Sabin says.

“I felt I needed to do this because with my family history,” Sabin says. “I felt studies I was participating in would help other people so that they won’t have to go through what I did with my own relatives.”

Subscribe to our FREE Ezine and be eligible for Health News, discounted products/services and coupons related to your Health. We publish 24/7.
HealthNewsDigest.com


Read Original Article

© 2009 HealthnewsDigest.com

Customer Care - 1-888-632-5353 Toll Free

  
Additional Articles
Global Warming: Our Best Guess is Wrong...
Wheaties Celebrates 85 Years
Plan B® One-Step—New FDA-Approved ...
Keeping Your Home Flea Free
Web Site Security
Considering A Career In Cosmetology
Knowing How To Handle Meat And Poultry
Pesticide Levels in Blood Linked to ...
Probiotics Help Gastric-bypass Patients...
New Roadside Survey Shows Steady in Use...
FDA Issues Draft Guidance for Industry ...
Ten Tips to Help Your Child Prepare for...
Loneliness: Human Nature and the Need ...
Risks of Delaying ACL Reconstruction in...
Doctors Talk Frankly About What and of ...
Regular Moderate Alcohol Intake Has in ...
Is it Heat or Ice On an Injury?
Do I Need a Supplement?
Put America on a Diet
Train Travel - Less Polluting?
Population Growth and Climate Change
CPR Mattress: An Innovation That Can ...
An Herbicide Used To Protect Corn Also ...
Milwaukee VA Hospital Gains New Spinal ...
Ugandan Medical Male Circumcision to ...
Entertaining Made Simple And Delicious ...
Leading Pioneers in Antibiotic-Free New...
Why Toxicology Testing Takes Time to of...
Segments of Carotid Artery Respond to ...
How to Prevent the Recession from You ...
Arthritis: Can the Body’s Own Defense ...
Stress and Depression Worsen Childhood ...
FDA Takes Enforcement Action Against ...
Parent's Guide to Cord Blood Foundation...
Women Cheat Too (that may include your ...
Proper Fit and Use of Walkers and Canes...
Nine Supplements for Osteoarthritis ...
The Eco-Dentistry Association™ a Week ...
The Metabolism Miracle
University of Phoenix Expands Advanced ...

Add to Google MSN HealthnewsDigest.com
 Add HealthnewsDigest.com
 To My Yahoo  Subscribe with Bloglines   Subscribe in NewsGator Online HealthnewsDigest.com
 News Feed

The materials and articles published on DentalPlans.com are for informational purposes only. Although DentalPlans.com strives to be accurate and complete, the information is provided without liability for errors. DentalPlans.com does not warrant the accuracy or completeness of the information, text graphics, links, or other items contained on DentalPlans.com.

DentalPlans.com expressly disclaims liability for errors or omissions in these materials and DentalPlans.com makes no commitment to update the information on DentalPlans.com.

DentalPlans.com expressly disclaims all liability for the use or interpretation by others of information on DentalPlans.com. Decisions based on information contained on DentalPlans.com are the sole responsibility of the visitors, and visitors agree to hold DentalPlans.com and its Affiliates harmless against any claims for damages arising from decisions visitors make on such information.

Nothing on DentalPlans.com constitutes medical advice or other forms of advice. DentalPlans.com assumes no responsibility for material created or published by third parties linked to DentalPlans.com with or without DentalPlans.coms knowledge.

Let's Get Connected
Like Us on Facebook Follow Us on Twitter DentalPlans.com Blog, Dental Insurance Alternatives View Our YouTube Channel
Email Me Savings & Updates
Submit
Privacy Policy
The DENTALPLANS.COM website is administered by DENTALPLANS.COM, INC., a licensed Florida Discount Medical Plan Organization, 8100 S.W. 10th Street Suite #2000, Plantation, FL 33324. Plans and Programs offered by DentalPlans.com are not health insurance policies. Plans and Programs offered by DentalPlans.com provide discounts at certain health care providers for medical services. Plans and Programs offered by DentalPlans.com do not make payments directly to the providers of medical services. The Plan or Program member is obligated to pay for all health care services but will receive a discount from those health care providers who have contracted with the Plan, Program or discount plan organization.
Special promotions including but not limited to additional months free and Membership Rewards® points from American Express are not available to California residents.

© 1999-2011 DentalPlans.com, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Patents Pending. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Florida is an Independent Licensee of the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association.
BBB Rating A+    McAfee SECURE sites help keep you safe from identity theft, credit card fraud, spyware, spam, viruses and online scams