Tuesday, November 29, 2011

November is Designated as Alzheimer's Awareness Month


Alzheimer’s disease or Alzheimer’s type dementia is a progressive degeneration of brain tissue that primarily strikes people over the age of 65.  People often ask me what the difference between Alzheimer’s and dementia is.  I like to explain it as dementia as the category.  A good example would be the category is soda; within that category are Coke, Pepsi, Mountain Dew, and root beer.  The category is Dementia; within that category are Alzheimer’s Disease, Vascular Alzheimer’s, Pick’s Disease, Crutzfeldt – Jakub Disease, Huntington Disease, Parkinson Disease, Lewy Body Disease, to name a few.  Alzheimer’s is the most common cause of dementia and is marked by a devastating mental decline in which intellectual functions such as memory, comprehension, and speech deteriorate.  

Attention tends to stray, simple calculations become impossible, and ordinary daily activities grow increasingly difficult with bewilderment and frustration.  Often, these symptoms tend to worsen at night.  Dramatic mood swings occur – outbursts of anger, bouts of fearfulness, and periods of deep apathy.  The sufferer, increasingly disoriented, may wander off and become lost.  Physical problems such as an odd gait or a loss of coordination gradually develop.  Eventually, the patient may become physically helpless, incontinent, and unable to communicate entirely. 

Alzheimer’s Disease can run its course from onset to death in just a few years, or it may play out over a period of as long as 20 years.  It is the sixth leading cause of death in the U.S.  Every 69 seconds, someone is diagnosed with Alzheimer’s: one person out of eight who are over the age of 65 has the disease.

The gradual loss of brain function that characterizes Alzheimer’s Disease seems to be due to two main forms of nerve damage: nerve cell develop tangles and protein deposits known as plaques that build up in the brain. 

Some forms of dementia can be treated: dementia caused by chronic alcohol or drug abuse, tumors, hypothyroidism, hypoglycemia, metabolic disorders, subdural hematoma.  Non-treatable causes of dementia include: Alzheimer’s disease Vascular Alzheimer’s and other dementia’s listed above.

Six months ago I received a call from Mary; she reads my articles and had been searching everywhere for her friend, Shirley, to have a place to go to relate with others in her condition.  I was her last hope.  At the age of 75, Shirley had been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s and had left the doctor’s office scared, frustrated, and sad.  With the information from her friend Mary, I was able to start a unique and very special Alzheimer’s peer group.  We meet the 1st Tuesday of every month at North Crest Assisted Living for lunch, giving the group a chance to discuss their Alzheimer’s; what they are feeling and going through themselves, and with their loved ones.  We close with a short Dementia/Alzheimer’s education training. 

If you are interested or know someone who would benefit please contact me at northcrest@centralwisconsinseniorliving.org or call 715-343-1288. 

Lori Schuler is the Marketing and Activity Director with Central Wisconsin Senior Living

Monday, November 21, 2011

Thank You For Making Rhythm & Brews Beach Bash a Success



Friday November 11, 2011, a first time event was held in Stevens Point
'Rhythm and Brews Beach Bash' fundraiser for Alzheimer's Association washeld at Players Lounge.  



Thirty different beers were there to taste, along with 7 different wines, and a couple of malt drinks.  We had fabulous food and Cadillac Pete and the Heat featuring Harold 'guitar' Ludtke.

There was an endless table of great silent auction items and a 50/50 raffle.  A great time was had by all.



We are already in the planning stage for 2012's Rhythm and Brews Beach Bash so watch for details, you don't want to miss out on a great time while raising money for an
important cause, 'Alzheimer's'.



Contributed by Lori Schuler; Marketing and Activity Director
for Central Wisconsin 

Friday, November 18, 2011

Halloween Memories of Trick and Treats For Our Residents





Who doesn't love getting dressed up, pretending to be someone - or something - else? Years ago it was called a masquerade but that word isn't used too often anymore. 








Holidays were often an opportunity to memorize poems. One I can still recite:


Five little pumpkins
Sitting on a gate.
The first one says,
"Oh my! It's getting late!"
The second one says,
"There are witches in the air."
The third one says,
"I don't care."
The fourth one says,
"Let's run and run and run."
The fifth one says,
"It's Halloween fun."
Then WOOOOO went the wind
And out went the light.
And the five little pumpkins
Rolled out of sight.








Another Halloween tradition was reciting poems of Edgar Allen Poe. What a fascination with the dark side of human nature. Do you remember:


"Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered weak and weary,
Over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore,
While I nodded, nearly nappy, suddenly there came a tapping,
As of some one gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door.
'Tis some visitor,' I muttered, 'tapping at my chamber door -
Only this, and nothing more...'"
Taken from The Raven, first published in 1845.


What are some of your early childhood memories of Halloween?

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Reprint From "The Day:" Help for Overwhelmed Dementia Caregivers


After caring for my husband who suffered from dementia/Alzheimer's at a time when little was known about Alzheimer's, I am pleased to see an increasing amount of exposure on television about the disease.
As is common with Alzheimer's, many suffer from additional problems. My husband's were paranoid syndrome, schizophrenia, diabetes, cancer and many other ailments, some equally traumatic.
A book titled "The 24 Hour Day" helped me understand his problems and find a knowledgeable social worker from a neighboring city.
Becausing I know the disease is mind-bending, my prayers go out to today's caregivers.

Author: Kathryn Shroyer Groton
www.theday.com/article/