Early Alzheimer's Guide For Families
Early Alzheimer's Guide For Families
Early Alzheimer's Guide For Families
Patient and Family Guide: Clinical Practice Guideline, Number 19, Consumer Version.
September 1996. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.ahrq.gov/patients-consumers/diagnosistreatment/treatments/alzheimers/index.html
This booklet is about Alzheimer's disease and other types of dementia. It presents information for patients, family
members, and other caregivers. It talks about the effects Alzheimer's disease can have on you, your family members, and
your friends.
The booklet describes the early signs and symptoms of Alzheimer's disease. Sources of medical, social, and financial
support are listed in the back of the booklet. This booklet is not about treating Alzheimer's disease.
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Who Is Affected?
The chances of getting Alzheimer's disease increase with age. It usually occurs after age 65. Most people are not affected
even at advanced ages. There are only two definite factors that increase the risk for Alzheimer's disease: a family history
of dementia and Down syndrome.
Down Syndrome
Persons with Down syndrome have a higher chance of getting Alzheimer's disease. Close relatives of persons with Down
syndrome also may be at risk.
Learning and remembering new information. Do you repeat things that you say or do? Forget conversations or
appointments? Forget where you put things?
Handling complex tasks. Do you have trouble performing tasks that require many steps such as balancing a checkbook or
cooking a meal?
Reasoning ability. Do you have trouble solving everyday problems at work or home, such as knowing what to do if the
bathroom is flooded?
Spatial ability and orientation. Do you have trouble driving or finding your way around familiar places?
Language. Do you have trouble finding the words to express what you want to say?
Behavior. Do you have trouble paying attention? Are you more irritable or less trusting than usual?
Remember, everyone has occasional memory lapses. Just because you can't recall where you put the car keys
doesn't mean you have Alzheimer's disease.
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Your doctor will ask about past and current medical problems and whether other family members have had Alzheimer's
disease or another form of dementia.
Education and other cultural factors can make a difference in how you will do on mental ability tests. Language problems
(for example, difficulty speaking English) can cause misunderstanding. Be sure to tell the doctor about any language
problems that could affect your test results.
It is important to tell the doctor about all the drugs you take and how long you have been taking them. Drug reactions can
cause dementia. Bring all medication bottles and pills to the appointment with your doctor.
Do you take any medications? Even over-the-counter drugs, eye drops, and alcohol can cause a decline in
mental ability. Tell your doctor about all the drugs you take. Ask if the drugs are safe when taken together.
Physical Examination
A physical examination can determine whether medical problems may be causing symptoms of dementia. This is
important because prompt treatment may relieve some symptoms.
Special Tests
Gathering as much information as possible will help your doctor diagnose early Alzheimer's disease while the condition is
mild. You may be referred to other specialists for further testing. Some special tests can show a persons mental strengths
and weaknesses and detect differences between mild, moderate, and severe impairment. Tests also can tell the
difference between changes due to normal aging and those caused by Alzheimer's disease.
If you go to a special doctor for these tests, he or she should return all test results to your regular family doctor. The
results will help your doctor track the progress of your condition, prescribe treatment, and monitor treatment effects.
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Report any changes in your symptoms. Ask the doctor what followup is right for you. Your doctor should keep the results
of the first round of tests for later use. After treatment of other health problems, new tests may show a change in your
condition.
Recognizing Alzheimer's disease in its early stages, when treatment may relieve mild symptoms, gives you time to adjust.
During this time, you and your family can make financial, legal, and medical plans for the future.
Coordinating Care
Your health care team may include your family doctor and medical specialists such as psychiatrists or neurologists,
psychologists, therapists, nurses, social workers, and counselors. They can work together to help you understand your
condition, suggest memory aids, and tell you and your family about ways you can stay independent as long as possible.
Talk with your doctors about activities that could be dangerous for you or others, such as driving or cooking. Explore
different ways to do things.
Support groups. Sometimes it helps to talk things over with other people and families who are coping with Alzheimer's
disease. Families and friends of people with Alzheimer's disease have formed support groups. The Alzheimer's
Association has active groups across the country. Many hospitals also sponsor education programs and support groups to
help patients and families.
Financial and medical planning. Time to plan can be a major benefit of identifying Alzheimer's disease early. You and
your family will need to decide where you will live and who will provide help and care when you need them.
Legal matters. It is also important to think about certain legal matters. An attorney can give you legal advice and help you
and your family make plans for the future. A special document called an advance directive lets others know what you
would like them to do if you become unable to think clearly or speak for yourself.
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social worker, and two consumer representatives developed the guideline. The Agency for Health Care Policy and
Research (AHCPR), an agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, supported its development. Other
AHCPR guidelines may be helpful to families affected by Alzheimer's disease. They include:
Depression Is a Treatable Illness: Patient Guide discusses major depressive disorder, which usually can be treated
successfully with the help of a health professional. (AHCPR Publication No. 93-0053)
Recovering After a Stroke: Patient and Family Guide tells how to help a person who has had a stroke achieve the best
possible recovery. (AHCPR Publication No. 95-0664)
Understanding Urinary Incontinence in Adults: Patient Guide describes why people lose urine when they don't want to and
what can be done about it. (AHCPR Publication No. 96-0684)
Preventing Pressure Ulcers: Patient Guide discusses symptoms and causes of bed sores and ways to prevent them.
(AHCPR Publication No. 92-0048)
Treating Pressure Sores: Consumer Guide describes basic steps of care for bed sores. (AHCPR Publication No. 95-0654)
For more information on these or other guidelines, or to receive printed copies of this booklet, call toll-free: 800-358-9295.
Or write to:
Agency for Health Care Policy and Research
Publications Clearinghouse
P.O. Box 8547
Silver Spring, MD 20907
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