Reverse babyhood, is my description of the aged adult. When my car accident happened, aged 34 as a senior social worker here in Australia, coma for about two weeks. The severe Traumatic Brain Injury had now been the last 38 years. Brain Injury at any age, has neurological effects, independent of dementia. Dementia is not reversible, not comprehensible, compared to normal brain injury. Now that my wife and myself are experiencing old age, the winner in our first ever legal marriage, is the person who gets dementia, second. Decline with biochemistry is normal in all biological mechanisms. Decline in functioning is normal with all machinery. Some "lucky" people might not live long enough to experience healthy adult living, and some might not live long enough to experience old age, with its biochemical decline.
exactly , als o dr u have such a soothing voice n nice hair, also my brothers irst name is burke lol i was thinking of him today but we mostly only talk on special ocassions so happens and ya of the elderly im mid 30s mom has some health probs and got some of the inflamtiontissues removed in late 2018 from brain rapidrel 2019 wasable to travel twice and come to my weddingetc my brother burke i mentieon d was in the band gelringin in sydney for yrs now produces , COMAS are wild for lack of better word im not sure i get the next sentence , i prefer the other words instead of dementia , u dont look that old but life can ware on1 ,, so music and art and pet thearpy dont reverse it ?? and some meds ? i guess they can help though im not quite sure what ur saying bout ur marriage either benig legal and that care n healing to u
First, I am so grateful for your thorough explanation of dementia. I was able to follow and understand, thank you. I was diagnosed with MCI last year. Doctor put me on Memantine and this med helped for a few months with my executive function. I started to cook again and plan meals. I was so happy to be motivated again. Sadly, it did not last. I had to stop taking it due to dizziness in the morning. Now, my doc doesn't know what else to give me. Seems so hopeless. The new medications are so expensive that most people cannot afford them in this country. I hope this changes soon for the other dementia patients. Please keep educating us on this disease.
Thank you so much for this thorough presentation! Very helpful! Very clearly presented. The speed of your voice is very helpful. Trying to follow a faster talker is so difficult!
nice information madam, it is very much helpfull to me because i am faculty in Psychology department, Gulbarga University, Kalaburagi. Karnataka. INDIA.
Is there any info on loss of executive function in bvFTD? I always get my hopes up when I see "dementia" but sadly, they always mean Alzheimer's I can't get anyone I know - apart from the specialist - to believe that loss of executive function even exists - it's always attributed to laziness, bad attitude etc