Alzheimer’s History
Alzheimer’s disease is the most
common form of dementia (a brain disorder that seriously affects the
person’s memory, intellectual, or thinking abilities as well as
interferes with social and/or occupational functioning) that occurs
in the elderly. Occurring in 60 to 70% of people with dementia above
the age of 65, Alzheimer’s disease is classified as progressive,
which means that its symptoms grow worse over time. Basically, the
disease gradually robs the sufferers of their ability to think and
function, and may even reduce lifespan.
The Alzheimer’s history began in the
early 1900s – in 1906, to be exact. That year, Alois Alzheimer
(1864-1915), a German physician well-known for his extensive work in
neuropathology and histopathology with other big names in science,
marked the Alzheimer’s history by describing a condition of a
certain middle aged patient of his.
The patient, named Auguste Deter, was
only 55 years old when she died for reasons that puzzled her
attending physicians, including Alzheimer himself. Her condition
involved progressive problems with memory, language, and behavior.
Little did anyone know that it would be her death that would signal
the beginning of the Alzheimer’s history.
After the death of Auguste D.,
Alzheimer, who was in Munich at the time, studied her brain to
determine what the factors that caused her symptoms to appear were.
There he found two changes in the tissue of the brain. During the
course of the Alzheimer’s history, these two changes would later
become the essential features of this brain disease.
First are the tangles. Called
Neurofibrillary tangles, these formations are intracellular
abnormalities involving the cytoplasm of the nerve cell. In order to
see them, one would have to use hematoxylin and eosin stain or
through silver impregnation techniques, as well as Congo red or
fluorescent dye thioflavine. These abnormalities are generally found
in the cerebral cortex, especially in the temporal lobe structures
such s the hippocampus and amygdale.
The second change that Alzheimer
noticed is the neuritic plaques. In the Alzheimer’s history, it has
been found that these neuritic plaques are actually made up of
protein called amyloid, which is naturally found in the body.
But for reasons yet unknown, large deposits of this protein are
formed between the nerve cells. Later, it was also discovered that
the plaques also contained deposits of aluminum silicate, in
addition to amyloid peptides, hence the term “amyloid plaques.”
This, along neurofibrillary tangles, are said to cause the symptoms
of Alzheimer’s.
Years after Alzheimer first described
these essential features of the disease, scientists have gained
greater insight into the genetic factors that contribute to
Alzheimer’s disease. In this period of Alzheimer’s history, it has
been found that there is a form of the disease that is mostly
hereditary – that is, it is passed from one family member to another
via their genetic makeup.
But much is still to be learned about
Alzheimer’s history before any real conclusions can be made. And at
present, the research on Alzheimer’s disease is more focused on
finding ways to prevent the onset of the symptoms.
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