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Alzheimer Disease Stages - Where Does It All Begin?
Alzheimer disease destroys vital brain cells over a period of time. It acts slowly but as each area of the brain is affected, it loses more abilities and functions. These losses include one's ability to think, remember, understand and to make decisions. Not only are one's mental abilities affected, but Alzheimer Disease affects moods and emotions, which manifest themselves as significant changes in behaviour over time.
The average duration of the disease is statistically between 8 and 12 years, although it can last from between 3 to 20 years. So, alzheimers can affect significant parts of your life.
There are a number of ways in which the stages of Alzheimer's disease can be recognised, but staging system often used by medical professionals, is the Global Deterioration Scale (which is also called the Reisberg Scale). This scale divides the disease into seven stages. These stages are as follows:
Level 1
No cognitive decline - (or Normal Adult). No subjective complaints of memory deficit. No memory deficit evident on clinical interviews.
Level 2
Very mild cognitive decline (forgetfulness or normal older adult). Subjective
complaints of memory deficit, most frequently in the following area:
(a) forgetting where one has placed familiar objects;
(b) forgetting names on formerly knew well. No objective evidence of memory
deficit on clinical interview. No objective deficits in employment or social
situations. Appropriate concern regarding symptoms.
Level 3
Mild cognitive decline (early confusional or Early AD). Earliest clear-cut
deficits. Manifestations in more than one of the following areas:
(a) patient may have gotten lost when traveling to an unfamiliar location;
(b) co-workers become aware of patient's relatively low performance;
(c) word and name finding deficit becomes evident to intimates;
(d) patient may read a passage of a book and retain relatively little material;
(e) patient may demonstrate decreased facility in remembering names upon
introduction to new people;
(f) patient may have lost or misplaced an object of value;
(g) concentration deficit may be evident on clinical testing. Objective
evidence of memory deficit obtained only
with an intensive interview. Denial begins to become manifest in patient.
Mild to moderate anxiety accompanies symptoms.Deficits noticed in demanding
employment situations.
Level 4
Moderate cognitive decline (Late Confusional or Mild AD). Clear-cut deficit
on careful clinical interview. Deficit manifest in following areas:
(a) decreased knowledge of current and recent events; (b) may exhibit some
deficit in memory of one's personal history;
(c) concentration deficit elicited on serial subtractions; (d) decreased
ability to travel, handle finances, etc.
Frequently no deficit in the following areas:
(a) orientation to time and person;
(b) recognition of familiar persons and faces;
(c) ability to travel to familiar locations. Inability to perform complex
tasks. Denial is dominant defense mechanism. Flattening of affect and withdrawl
from challenging situations occur.
Level 5
Moderately severe cognitive decline (Early Dementia or moderate AD). Patient
can no longer survive without some assistance. Patient is unable during
interview to recall a major relevant aspect of their current lives, e.g.,
an address or telephone number of many years, the names of close family
members (such as grandchildren), the name of the high school or college
from which they graduated. Frequently some disorientation to time (date,
day of week, season, etc.) or to place. An educated person may have difficulty
counting back from 40 by 4s or from 20 by 2s. Persons at this stage retain
knowledge of many major facts regarding themselves and others. They invariably
know
their own names and generally know their spouse's and children's names.
They require no assistance with toileting and eating, but may have some
difficulty choosing the proper clothing to wear.
Level 6
Severe cognitive decline (Middle Dementia or Moderately Severe AD). May
occasionally forget the name of the spouse upon whom they are entirely dependent
for survival. Will be largely unaware of all recent events and experiences
in their lives. Retain some knowledge of their past lives but this is very
sketchy. Generally unaware of their surroundings, the year, the season,
etc. May have difficulty counting from 10, both backward and sometimes forward.
Will require some assistance with activities of daily living, e.g., may
become incontinent, will require travel assistance but occasionally will
display ability to orient to familiar locations. Diurnal rhythm frequently
disturbed. Almost always recall
their own name. Frequently continue to be able to distinguish familiar from
unfamiliar persons in their environment. Personality and emotional changes
occur. These are quite variable and include
(a) delusional behavior, e.g., patients may accuse their spouse of being
an impostor, may talk to imaginary figures in the environment, or to their
own reflection in the mirror;
(b) obsessive symptoms, e.g., person may
continually repeat simple cleaning activities;
(c) anxiety symptoms, agitation, and even previously nonexistent violent
behavior may occur;
(d) cognitive abulla, i.e., loss of willpower because an individual cannot
carry a thought long enough to determine a purposeful course of
action.
6a - Requires Assistance dressing
6b - Requires Assistance bathing properly
6c - Requires Assistance with mechanics of toileting
6d - Urinary incontinence
6e - Fecal incontinence
Level 7
Very severe cognitive decline (Late Dementia or Severe AD). All verbal abilities
are lost. Frequently there is no speech at all - only grunting. Incontinent
of urine, requires assistance toileting and feeding. Lose basic psychomotor
skills, e.g., ability to walk, sitting and head control.
The brain appears to no longer be able to tell the body what to do. Generalized
and cortical neurologic signs and symptoms are frequently present.
7a - Speech ability limited to about a half-dozen intelligible words
7b - Intelligible vocabulary limited to a single word
7c - Ambulatory ability lost
7d - Ability to sit up lost
7e - Ability to smile lost
7f - Ability to hold up head lost
The effects will vary depending on the individual, so the stages given
above (adapted from Reisberg, B., Ferris, S.H., Leon, J.J. & Crook,
T. The global deterioration scale for the assessment of primary degenerative
dementia. American Journal of Psychiatry, 1982) can only be used as guidelines.










