Alzheimer Prevention
Alzheimer’s disease is a progressive
degenerative illness that results in the destruction of a person’s
cognitive skills and abilities, including thinking, reasoning,
learning and retention, communication, and sometimes even motor.
While much of the research currently being done on Alzheimer’s
disease is on finding a cure and treatment for the symptoms,
considerable progress has also been made in Alzheimer prevention.
As the president and medical director
of the Alzheimer’s Prevention Foundation International in Tucson,
Arizona, Dharma Singh Khalsa, M.D., is one of the physicians at the
forefront of Alzheimer prevention. He contends that the current
research on the disease serves only to confirm the idea that
Alzheimer prevention is the only practical way of dealing with it.
“We have to realize that the era of
the magic bullet – drugs for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease –
is over,” asserts Dr. Khalsa. According to him, there is a need to
take an integrative approach as what has been done for heart
disease. “What works for the heart, works for the head,” he further
adds.
Dr. Khalsa’s Alzheimer prevention
principle is based on the concept that while the disease progression
may be slowed down with medications and drugs, to prevent the
disease from developing in the first place, certain steps ought to
be taken. Foremost among these steps is to recognize and reduce the
factors that lead to Alzheimer’s disease.
Alzheimer’s – a Multi-factorial
Disease
Many scientists agree with Dr. Khalsa
that Alzheimer’s is actually a multi-factorial disease. That is, its
development is dependent upon several variables, including but not
exclusive to nutrition, chronic stress, and lifestyle choices.
However, Dr. Khalsa believes that out of these risk factors, the
most probable cause of Alzheimer’s are chronic, unrelenting stress
and free radical damage and oxidative stress, all of which occur at
a certain point in our lives as we age.
Studies show that there are people
who appear to be able to protect themselves against memory loss even
though their brains show significant damage from Alzheimer’s
disease. It has been observed that these people are usually the ones
who are mentally engaged or physically active. Additionally, there
are also many Alzheimer’s patients who reach 80 and beyond with
their memory intact, thus, suggesting that the disease is not a
normal part of aging. All these findings further suggest that those
who remain mentally active in their later years have a better chance
at Alzheimer prevention that those who are not.
The notion is that if people remain
mentally engaged, this would result in the establishment of more
synaptic connections between neurons in response to new learning. As
observed in children’s brains, new synaptic connection is an
integral part of learning and is a process that continues for the
person’s entire biological life. Thus, as you grow older, your
synaptic connection should grow denser as well.
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