Sunday, August 10, 2014

Alzheimer’s Disease - Robs Memory: Steals Dignity: Escapes Treatment

Alzheimer’s Disease - Robs Memory: Steals Dignity: Escapes Treatment


At a well reputed Mumbai Club, quite unexpectedIy, I bumped into Sumeet (name changed). It has indeed been a long while since we met at his home in South Mumbai. He came there with his wife Shilpa (name changed). Sumeet, was literally an icon of yesteryears in every respect, a bright engineer with MBA and a much-accomplished leader of his time who retired at the turn of the new millennium.
“How are you Sumeet da?”, I started off cheerfully, as he was looking all around.
“Very well, very well and you?”, he replied softly with a faint quivering of his lips, but without any eye contact.
“I am good Sumeet da, but have you recognized me?” I queried with apprehension.
Turning his face towards Shilpa, Sumeet hesitatingly replied, “No. But have we met before?”
The innocent question struck me as lightning from nowhere, making me a bundle of emotion momentarily. With a lump in my throat and clenching my fists, I struggled hard to regain my composure.
Sumeet, one of the the brightest of brights, from earlier years of our generation, is now a victim of a dreaded illness called Alzheimer’s Disease (AD). The disease has robbed him of his priceless memory, changed his behavior beyond recognition, kidnapped him from his own self, and has stolen most of his much-valued dignity in life, mercilessly.
Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) in brief:
Alzheimer’s Disease (AD), as known to many, is the most common form of dementia, accounting for 60 to 80 percent of all cases, that results in serious memory loss and other intellectual and behavioral traits of individuals, serious enough to interfere with a person’s daily life and tasks.
AD has been defined as, a neurodegenerative type of dementia, in which the death of brain cells causes memory loss and cognitive decline. The total brain size shrinks with AD, as the tissue has progressively fewer nerve cells and connections. Brains affected by AD would always show tiny inclusions in the nerve tissue, called plaques and tangles.
Plaques are found between the dying cells in the brain – from the build-up of a protein called beta-amyloid, while the tangles are within the brain neurons and from a disintegration of another protein, called tau.
Though the abnormal protein clumps and inclusions in the brain tissues are always present in AD, there could be another underlying process also that is actually causing the disease, which scientists are not sure of, as yet.
Be that as it may, with the progression of the disease, besides memory loss, AD precipitates other serious symptoms, such as, deepening confusion about events, time and place; mood and behavior changes; unfounded suspicions about family, friends and even professional caregivers; disorientation; other behavior changes; then difficulty speaking, swallowing and walking. At a late stage, the patients lose the ability to carry on even a conversation and respond to their environment.
Cause:
Although the causes of AD are not quite clear to the scientists, as yet, the disease results from a combination of genetic, lifestyle and environmental factors that adversely affect the brain over a period of time.
Scientists opine that in less than 5 percent of the cases, the causative factors of the AD are specific genetic changes that can almost definitively indicate that a person would develop AD. According to published reports, while the strongest risk gene found so far is apolipoprotein e4 (APOE e4), other risk genes have not been conclusively confirmed, just yet.
Survival rate:
According to published reports, the survival rate of AD patients, after their symptoms become noticeable to others, can range from 4 to 20 years, depending on health conditions, the average being 8 years. In the United States, AD is the sixth leading cause of death.
Not a normal part of the aging process:
Although majority of people with AD are over 60 years of age, it is not just a disease of old age. Up to 5 percent of cases the disease may strike even younger people in 40s or 50s. Women are found to be more prone to AD than men.
Prevalence:
The World Health Organization (WHO) declared dementia, in general, as a priority condition in 2008, through the Mental Health Gap Action Program.
Each year, the total number of new cases of dementia worldwide has been reported as nearly 7.7 million, which means one new case every four seconds.
According to AC Immune SA of Switzerland, AD will be one of the biggest burdens of the future society showing dramatic incidence rates. Over 44 million people were now affected with AD worldwide. Since the incidence and prevalence of AD increase with age, the number of patients will grow dramatically as our society gets older. By 2050 the patient numbers are expected to triple, touching 135 million AD patients worldwide.
India:
According to another report titled, “Priority Medicines for Europe and the World – A Public Health Approach to Innovation” By Béatrice Duthey, Ph.D published on 20 February 2013, the fastest growth of AD in the elderly population is now taking place in China, India, and their south Asian and western Pacific neighbors and has become a major public health concern as the population ages.
AD is the most common kind neurodegenerative disease in India. There are reportedly around 5 million dementia patients in the country of which, roughly 70 to 80 per cent have AD. This number is expected to double by 2030, and the costs involved are expected to increase three times. Besides drugs, costs of ‘care giving’ for AD patients are also expected to rise significantly.
The market and economic impact:
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