Deepak Quotes

To know the world feel it instead of thinking about it.

Books

Ageless Body, Timeless Mind: The Quantum Alternative to Growing Old

Ageless Body, Timeless Mind: The Quantum Alternative to Growing Old
October 30, 2007, Harmony Books, New York, New York Ageless Body, Timeless Mind goes beyond current anti-aging research and ancient mind/body wisdom to dramatically demonstrate that we do not...

Reinventing the Body, Resurrecting the Soul: How to Create a New You

Reinventing the Body, Resurrecting the Soul: How to Create a New You
Fifteen years after his #1 New York Times bestseller, Ageless Body, Timeless Mind, Deepak Chopra revisits "the forgotten miracle"–the body's infinite capacity for change and...

War of the Worldviews: Science vs. Spirituality

War of the Worldviews: Science vs. Spirituality
From the New York Times bestselling author of Buddha and Jesus comes the page-turning and soul-stirring story of Muhammad. Deepak Chopra—easily one of the most influential spiritual...

Quantum Healing: Exploring the Frontiers of Mind/Body Medicin

Quantum Healing: Exploring the Frontiers of Mind/Body Medicin
Here is an extraordinary new approach to healing by an extraordinary physician-writer -- a book filled with the mystery, wonder, and hope of people who have experienced seemingly miraculous...

How to Know God: The Soul's Journey into the Mystery of Mysteries

How to Know God: The Soul's Journey into the Mystery of Mysteries
Harmony Books, October 10, 2007, New York You don't have to believe in God in order to experience God. —Deepak Chopra The best-selling author of Ageless Body, Timeless Mind and The...

Spiritual Solutions: Answers to Life's Greatest Challenges

Spiritual Solutions: Answers to Life's Greatest Challenges
Life is full of challenges, both big and small. Spirituality is here to offer solutions. Over the course of his career as physician, teacher, and bestselling author, Deepak Chopra has received...

Perfect Health: The Complete Mind/Body Guide, Revised and Updated Edition

Perfect Health: The Complete Mind/Body Guide, Revised and Updated Edition
A decade ago, Deepak Chopra, M.D., wrote Perfect Health, the first practical guide to harnessing the healing power of the mind, which became a national bestseller. The book described how...

Buddha: A Story of Enlightenment

Buddha: A Story of Enlightenment
Bestselling author Deepak Chopra brings the Buddha back to life in this gripping novel of the young prince who abandoned his inheritance to discover his true calling. This iconic journey changed...

The Path to Love: Spiritual Strategies for Healing

The Path to Love: Spiritual Strategies for Healing
Join Deepak Chopra on a wondrous journey. . . "The Path to Love." Philosophical, inspiring, and ultimately very practical, The Path to Love is a book that can change lives as it invites...

The Soul of Leadership

The Soul of Leadership
Mindfulness, meditation, and awareness of the power of emotions is helpful in every area of life, and now, after 55 books, Chopra offers a succinct guide that employs his principles and...

The Book of Secrets: Unlocking the Hidden Dimensions of Your Life

The Book of Secrets: Unlocking the Hidden Dimensions of Your Life
Every life is a book of secrets, ready to be opened. The secret of perfect love is found there, along with the secrets of healing, compassion, faith, and the most elusive one of all: who we...

The Seven Spiritual Laws of Superheroes

The Seven Spiritual Laws of Superheroes
Harnessing Our Power to Change the World. Given the volatile state of the world, it is no coincidence that superheroes have captured our imagination like never before. Everywhere you look,...

Power, Freedom, and Grace: Living from the Source of Lasting Happiness

Power, Freedom, and Grace: Living from the Source of Lasting Happiness
Deepak Chopra considers the mystery of our existence and its significance in our eternal quest for happiness. Who am I? Where did I come from? Where do I go when I die? Chopra draws upon the...

The Seven Spiritual Laws of Success

The Seven Spiritual Laws of Success
Based on natural laws which govern all of creation, this book shatters the myth that success is the result of hard work, exacting plans, or driving ambition. In The Seven Spiritual Laws of Success,...

Events

 
 
 
November 15 2011

Alzheimer’s Disease: How to Face Fear With Knowledge (Part 1)

Category:  Consciousness , Health , Spirituality , Science

By Deepak Chopra, MD, FACP and Rudolph Tanzi, Ph.D.,
The Joseph P and Rose F. Kennedy, Professor of Neurology, Harvard Medical School, Director of Genetics and Aging, Massachusetts General Hospital


Few people feel comfortable thinking about the aging process, but discomfort turns to fear when it comes to the brain. Medically, everyone’s brain slows down in some way as they age. This doesn’t have to be a source of fear – to be older is often to be calmer, wiser, more at peace. Those desirable states are mental. The brain is secondary. But the brain is primary when it comes to disease, and the most feared disease is Alzheimer’s.


In this first post we’ll try to bring some light to this dark subject by asking what Alzheimer’s is and what we know about, which is far more than a decade ago. In the second post we’ll move on to diagnosis and treatment. Advances in those areas are also being made, but medical science is just on the verge of discovering how Alzheimer’s might possibly be prevented and slowed down. So this will be an interim report, shedding hope where hope is real but facing the facts as squarely as possible. My hope is that having full knowledge is a good way to dispel anxiety.
 

Visualization is courtesy of TheVisualMD.com




Nerve cells in the brain need to be in constant communication with their neighboring cells in order for the brain to function properly. The effects of aging involve slower or lessened communication. In Alzheimer’s disease this is drastically worsened by the presence of senile plaques and tangles inside of nerve cells that disrupt communication between nerve cells and breakdown of the neural network. The free flow of information is physically blocked, like a telephone system wrecked by a devastating hurricane.

As people grow older, what they fear the most isn’t mortality but becoming a burden on their children. That burden is worst when a parent becomes senile (today the medically preferred term is dementia), entering what was traditionally called by the euphemism of second childhood. Senility takes many forms, and the most common form of dementia in the elderly is Alzheimer’s disease, which accounts for 70-80% of cases. In the past few decades people are becoming increasingly aware of the impact Alzheimer’s has on society. About 5.4 million Americans have some stage of Alzheimer’s, and almost 15 million are caregivers for them and for patients suffering from other forms of dementia. Alzheimer’s is also the sixth leading cause of death in the US, and that figure isn’t going down: in keeping with the graying of America, deaths from Alzheimer’s have risen 66% since 2000. Every 72 seconds, a new case of Alzheimer’s is diagnosed in the U.S. and this will only get worse in coming years with 71 million aging baby boomers.

While the pathology and clinical symptoms are basically the same for all cases of Alzheimer’s disease, cases are generally divided into two categories: “early-onset” striking before the age of 65, and the more common “late-onset” form. Twin studies reveal that inherited factors play a role in at least 80% of all cases, early or late. However, genetic factors are particularly strong in the early-onset familial forms of Alzheimer’s disease. People who develop this form of Alzheimer’s usually start showing symptoms of memory loss before age 65. In the most acute cases people have been affected as early as age 20. This type of Alzheimer’s can be caused by any of over 200 defects in three different genes, all of which guarantee disease, usually before the age of 60, when inherited. In the late-onset form of the disease, gene defects tend to influence susceptibility without necessarily guaranteeing the disease within a normal lifetime.

The far more common form of Alzheimer’s affects people over the age of 65. Risk of developing it doubles every 5 years after that, until the highest risk, when up to 40% of Americans aged 85 or over may be suffering from Alzheimer’s in some stage. After the age of 85 the incidence of Alzheimer’s continues to increase, and many today believe that virtually all of us would have Alzheimer’s if we lived to 120 years old.

One complication is that it can be difficult to differentiate memory loss due to Alzheimer’s from other causes. This again is comforting since these other causes are sometimes preventable and treatable. (Dehydration, vitamin deficiencies, poor diet, adverse events of multiple prescriptions, for example, make almost every symptom of old age worse, including the mental ones. These two conditions should be monitored closely as we age.) As we age, our short-term memory and ability to learn and register new information begins to decline, while long-term memory is retained for much longer periods into old age.

Sometimes, mild memory loss is accompanied by a change in personality as well: someone who is normally outgoing and gregarious may become moody and withdrawn, for example. In other cases of dementia, such as frontal-temporal lobe dementia, a patient may become disinhibited, and unable to control inappropriate outbursts. These can also be signs that something more than normal brain aging. Yet once again there are causes that aren’t necessarily related to Alzheimer’s, such a depression, a common condition that needs to be monitored and treated. We shouldn’t be victimized by a sense of hopelessness and anxiety. The attitude to take is that we live in the era of “the new old age” where we can reasonably expect is to retain healthy functioning for many decades. 

The earliest stage of Alzheimer’s disease is termed mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Although most of us start to have a harder time remembering names and numbers as we age, someone with MCI may start to forget recent conversations and events or have difficulty performing tasks that were once easy for them. Memory loss and other brain changes start to interfere with the person’s daily life and make it difficult or even unsafe for them to work or continue with their usual activities. However, these changes aren’t profound enough to affect the person’s ability to function socially. Mild impairment, unfortunately, doesn’t stabilize at that level. In a given year, about 15% of those newly diagnosed with MCI will progress to dementia, most to Alzheimer’s disease. Within 8 years, 80% will have progressed.

For a diagnosis of dementia, problems must be present in at least one other area of cognitive function besides memory loss: the areas are language, attention, problem solving, spatial skills, judgment, planning, or organization. In the early stages of Alzheimer’s, the person may typically have difficulty with remembering information and events and with learning new things. They may get lost easily, even on familiar routes near their home. They may also start to have trouble reading, speaking or writing as their vocabulary shrinks.

In the moderate stages of Alzheimer’s, gaps in memory and thinking are noticeable. For instance, someone with moderate-stage Alzheimer’s might be unable to remember his/her phone number or address. Assistance isn’t yet needed for eating or using the toilet. Advanced-stage symptoms of Alzheimer’s are the most difficult, especially for caregivers, because dependence on them becomes complete. Speech is reduced to simple phrases, then single words. Eventually there may be no speech at all. The person becomes extremely fatigued and apathetic, but can still be very aggressive or paranoid at times. Assistance is needed with dressing and basic bodily functions, in time leading for many to complete loss of mental abilities.

These are hard facts to face, surely, but despair is not inevitable by any means. Not every cause of dementia is untreatable. Some, such as those caused by thyroid disorders or vitamin deficiencies, can be reversed. But most dementia is caused by degeneration in the brain that takes place over time and progresses insidiously. Besides Alzheimer’s, examples include multi-infarct dementia (dementia caused by multiple tiny strokes) or dementia caused by repeated trauma, for example concussions suffered in sports.

It is now recognized that Alzheimer’s is the most common form of dementia, afflicting about 70% to 80% of elderly individuals who are afflicted. (Researchers now believe that Alzheimer’s begins a long time, possibly even decades, before the first symptoms of memory loss are seen.) In Alzheimer’s nerve cells and their connections, call synapses, deteriorate mostly in the cerebral cortex and hippocampus. The cerebral cortex is an extremely convoluted structure that’s associated with higher mental functions: thought, reasoning, sensation, and motion. The hippocampus plays a crucial role in learning and in processing various forms of information, such as long-term memory and spatial memory. Both the cerebral cortex and the hippocampus lose mass and shrink as the disease advances.

Several key proteins are deposited in the brain during the course of Alzheimer’s disease, including beta amyloid protein and tau protein. The pathology of Alzheimer’s begins with the accumulation of beta amyloid deposited outside of brain nerve cells in senile plaques and on brain blood vessels. Excessive beta-amyloid then triggers the aberrant aggregation of the tau protein in neurofibrillary tangles, which choke the inside of nerve cells. The buildup of both deposits leads to nerve cell dysfunction and degeneration, eventually causing Alzheimer’s type dementia. All four of the known Alzheimer’s genes carry defects that lead to excessive accumulation of beta-amyloid in the brain Most Alzheimer’s scientists believe that it’s the excessive accumulation of beta amyloid proteins that initiates the nerve cell tangles to form, which then leads to neurodegeneration and dementia.

We’ve given only a sketch of a disorder that is occupying a vast force of researchers who advance our knowledge every year. In Alzheimer’s knowledge is power, and it’s fair to say that a shift of power is occurring. Medical science is no longer bewildered by this disorder, and real hope for better diagnosis is already bright, while sure signs of hope are also growing in terms of treatment and prevention. The reality we will be talking about in the next post is far less grim than it was even a few years ago.


 


 

Top comments

  • It is so wonderful to see the facts laid out as beautifully as they are here. My mother began exhibiting signs of early-onset Alzheimer`s disease 10 years ago and is still living in the advanced stage of the disease that you described so vividly. I wrote a book of poetry called "Searching For Cecy: Reflections on Alzheimer`s" that will be released November 25th about Mom`s journey into Alzheimer`s and my own struggle to find peace. I wrote the poems over an eight year period in order to make sense out of a situation that seemed so out of control and frightening. Watching Mom today brings me a sense of peace. I have no idea what her journey is about here on earth and why she has had to suffer in this way, but there have been moments of great beauty and wisdom that I have had the privilege of witnessing in her interactions with others. She is extraordinary and brave and I am so very proud to be her daughter. Thanks for bringing awareness to a challenge that so many families are facing today.

    Judy Prescott, author of "Searching For Cecy: Reflections on Alzheimer`s" // 2011-11-16 22:23:56 // //
  • I fear this for my husband and I more than any other disease.

    Judy Hoover // 2011-11-15 16:47:55 // //

 

 

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  • My mother began the Journey with Alzheimer`s disease when she was only 60 years old. The journey we walked together was very difficult, and lasted for 16 years. Nine of those years were spent living with me, and the remaining 7 years were spent in a Nursing home. If I were to be able to be sent back to re-live this challenge, I know that now, I would be much better prepared and capable of seeing this "valley experience" as one that was to teach both of us lessons on our pathway to God. Since my Mom passed away in 1987, I have been very blessed to have met Dr. Deepak Chopra, through his writings, DVD`s and tape recordings. My life now could never compare to living and walking the journey with my Mom, because I have learned to spend my life in the moment, finding peace and tranquility even in the "storms" of life, and being grateful and thankful for each breath I take, and each day I live. Back in the days when my Mom was ill, I was living in a very rigid, "tribunal" lifestyle, with the traditional fear factor. I could never express my anger, or disappointment properly, and the "ego" in my soul certainly stirred up emotions that prevented my mom and I from enjoying living in the moment and accepting her disease. I am blessed to be 68 years old now. When my Mom passed I was only 43. I do not display ayn symptoms of Alzheimer`s disease now, nor do I believe I will in the future. Living in the moment, speaking my own truth, being authentic, meditating, and visiting the "gap", all have contributed to the peaceful days that I live now. I do not live in the past, nor do I look to the future. I live in the moment and the Power of NOW! So, I wish to say "thank you" Dr. Chopra for the inspiration that you have shown to many of us. You truly are a part of my living in the moment life, and I shall ever be grateful. Namaste`

    Musicnoteseven // 2012-01-29 20:27:49 // //
  • My mother had Alzheimer`s disease too and the process before is even more worse than the final diagnosis and the process thereafter. But nowadays we as elders are bombarded by medical science with doom for our future. One in five elderly is now supposed to get Alzheimer. Am not buying into this anymore and will stay for sure out of the hands of any doctor as long as am able too. Am going to program myself in this by firstly not believing and not expecting it to happen to me. I also do not believe in all those preliminary investigations on how to prevent it happening. My generation is a large one, we are the first generation that has given the vision by medical science that we are able to live longer in better health. But the way they are presenting this nowadays by keeping people alife against their own will is not done, just as the opposite fact of making you fear any disease you might encounter is not done either!! Thanks to the Internet for making me become aware more and more.......

    heartphone // 2011-12-24 09:51:22 // //
  • Did you see the movie - "Lovely, Still"? I`m lovin` that movie, and to think the person who wrote it was so young. Such a wonderful treatment on coping with the person who has alzheimers.

    Jo // 2011-12-13 17:27:22 // //
  • I watch so much of our family and friends facing this dreaded stage..and hope that a cure can be found one day. I find the some signs of cognitive effects that medications have on us now and pray that the the long term occurance on the does tax the brain and cause more harm for many of us that our on so many of the pharm meds ...! We have come so far in Science but there is so much more to learn..!

    bchew.. // 2011-11-28 23:24:49 // //
  • Hi, Is there a way to subscribe to this series of articles so that I will be notificed when the next part is published? Thank you for the commentary Deepak and thank you for your brief appearance at Occupy Wall Street as well.

    JP // 2011-11-23 20:07:18 // //
  • I suppose I am one of the fortunate ones who have been given a gift as a result of my wifes alzheimers.After five years of challenges. My wife Nandini was aditted to a care home first, then to a nursing home after six weeks, where she is now. The gift is that when we discussed her illness, we both agreed that we had been given this for a reason,and that we must have agreed to this at a soul level when we got together. So as her condition got worse, I kept reminding myself that while I was losing her mentaly, we still had a strong connection heart to heart and soul to soul. She has now created her own little world for herself, which I am allowed to visit and leave without any problem.The fact that she is happy, is a wonderful gift and I am happy in my world.

    Barnaby Johnson // 2011-11-22 21:26:16 // //
  • My dad suffers from this and the way he seems to be going is scary and pretty difficult on the care takers.

    Ravi // 2011-11-21 05:07:32 // //
  • I seem to have missed some information in my last comment: EMAIL coral8791@gmail.com TWITTER @coral8791 FACEBOOK Coral Reef BLOG http://altheal.blogspot.com/ BOOK http://www.amazon.com/kindle/dp/B005YJSY2S

    Coral // 2011-11-21 01:46:09 // //
  • The article on Alzheimer`s has been written meticulously with almost all aspects addressed. Thank you for that. I have a complaint though. Measures to prevent the onset of the dissease have not been adequately written about. Easy to do breathing execises of PRANAYAMA help keep the brain sufficiently nourished and connected. YOGASANAS and exercises also help. MUDRAS allievate the nervous impairment. These alternative methods not only prevent Alzheimers but also improve the well-being of the sufferer. As an alternativemedicine practicioner in India, I have seen a scientist here going through this condition regain vitality. Coral [http://www.amazon.com/kindle/dp/B005YJSY2S]

    Coral // 2011-11-21 00:53:39 // //
  • cerco de miseria en sinaloa auxilio mucho por vivir harta de ser usada como amuleto de buena suerte. 27 de febrero del 69 quedo de usted la perra

    iskra_angela@hotmail.com // 2011-11-19 18:17:46 // //
  • Dear Deepak, This was like reading a page from my Mother`s life. She is 69 and effected with fronto temporal dementia since 2005 and I cud connect with the beautiful explanation u have illustrated. I eagerly await your next post on this. "Medical science is no longer bewildered by this disorder, and real hope for better diagnosis is already bright, while sure signs of hope are also growing in terms of treatment and prevention. The reality we will be talking about in the next post is far less grim than it was even a few years ago" I am also sure that medical science will come out with something more defining in terms of slowing or reversing this disease to a certain extent. What`s also more lacing specially in India is the acceptability of the disease and being able to handle it in a more socially friendly and passionate/ supportive environment. Attitude of people need to change and more activities and cognitive stimulation for the patients and support groups for families experiencing dementia need to be put in place. We need to migrate best practices like what Alzheimer`s Society UK etc are doing in building awareness, social support and volunteers in this space. Look forward to your next post. Cheers, Karan Ahluwalia Mumbai, India Karan.ahluwalia@gmail.com

    Karan Ahluwalia // 2011-11-18 09:03:38 // //
  • There`s a few typos in my post. There is no amedeo110@aol.com. That`s an iPad for you. It thinks it knows what you want to write and if you don`t catch it, oh well, this it what happens. I meant to say.... Yes, I am worse...

    Lisalisa110 // 2011-11-17 13:30:31 // //
  • Hold on to "love". If you approach everything with love in your heart, then you to will be able offer a hand through the journey of Alzheimer`s. I did it. Yes, I amedeo110@aol.com worse for wear. Mom is gone since 2004, but with a blink of an eye, it is yesterday. It still hurts. That`s the aftershock, it eases, but never ceases. LOVE, I promise you, it works. There`s a book everyone should read if you`re facing this journey. It`s by Frena Grey Davidson, Love, Is The Answer. It changed my life. I did not know what Alzheimer`s was back in 1999. All I knew was that Pres. Regan had "it". That`s what the doctor said, one day he decided its Moms dementia is of the Alzheimer`s type. My world COLLAPSED! The library became my salvation. I armed myself with all the knowledge I needed and jumped in head-first. I knew what I had to do to help my Mom and Dad. What I learned was this. You cannot do this alone. It will ravage your mind,your body, and rip your soul to shreds. I thought I was superwoman, with a toddler in tow and a teenager too. I did survive, but scarred for life. I still battle the depression this disease shed on me. Just remember LOVE. IT`S GREATER THAN ANYTHING! If you know someone, get someone else and then give them love, support and prayers.

    Lisalisa110 // 2011-11-17 13:27:39 // //
  • It is so wonderful to see the facts laid out as beautifully as they are here. My mother began exhibiting signs of early-onset Alzheimer`s disease 10 years ago and is still living in the advanced stage of the disease that you described so vividly. I wrote a book of poetry called "Searching For Cecy: Reflections on Alzheimer`s" that will be released November 25th about Mom`s journey into Alzheimer`s and my own struggle to find peace. I wrote the poems over an eight year period in order to make sense out of a situation that seemed so out of control and frightening. Watching Mom today brings me a sense of peace. I have no idea what her journey is about here on earth and why she has had to suffer in this way, but there have been moments of great beauty and wisdom that I have had the privilege of witnessing in her interactions with others. She is extraordinary and brave and I am so very proud to be her daughter. Thanks for bringing awareness to a challenge that so many families are facing today. Judy Prescott, author of "Searching For Cecy: Reflections on Alzheimer`s" // less than one minute ago // 1 like(s) // Like

    Judy Prescott, author of "Searching For Cecy: Reflections on Alzheimer`s" www.judyprescott.comhttp://www.facebook.com/searchingforcecy // 2011-11-16 22:34:10 // //
  • It is so wonderful to see the facts laid out as beautifully as they are here. My mother began exhibiting signs of early-onset Alzheimer`s disease 10 years ago and is still living in the advanced stage of the disease that you described so vividly. I wrote a book of poetry called "Searching For Cecy: Reflections on Alzheimer`s" that will be released November 25th about Mom`s journey into Alzheimer`s and my own struggle to find peace. I wrote the poems over an eight year period in order to make sense out of a situation that seemed so out of control and frightening. Watching Mom today brings me a sense of peace. I have no idea what her journey is about here on earth and why she has had to suffer in this way, but there have been moments of great beauty and wisdom that I have had the privilege of witnessing in her interactions with others. She is extraordinary and brave and I am so very proud to be her daughter. Thanks for bringing awareness to a challenge that so many families are facing today.

    Judy Prescott, author of "Searching For Cecy: Reflections on Alzheimer`s" // 2011-11-16 22:23:56 // //
  • Really appreciate this information. I frequently forget details such as people`s names, character`s names or things people say in films, but this is something I have never been very good at -- so I don`t really think it`s a big issue for me at this stage. I am more concerned for my parents and granny than for myself in relation to dementia since it can be such a difficult process to manage, especially when care is absent. Typically in Australia and the UK children will look after their aging parents from a distance, but this seems to vary from case to case. Understanding that aged people most fear putting a burden on their children helps us understand this relationship better. It would be good to look at ways to reunite distanced families in situations where care has become imperative. Thanks again

    Fragman // 2011-11-16 19:50:03 // //
  • Dr. Chopra, Gracias. Tengo 58 años. ¿A mi edad, que hábitos de vida ayudan en la prevención de del Alzheimer?

    Francisco Corrales // 2011-11-16 06:52:21 // //
  • Good afternoon Mr. Chopra. My question... Which people are more prone to get this disease? genetic ?

    Lizzie Samudio // 2011-11-15 16:48:40 // //
  • My Granny had it badly but rather late in life. How likely is it that I might get it as well?

    Anja Liebenberg // 2011-11-15 16:48:15 // //
  • I fear this for my husband and I more than any other disease.

    Judy Hoover // 2011-11-15 16:47:55 // //