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Alzheimer鈥檚 special

Alzheimer鈥檚: How to diagnose it. Different ways male and female brains respond to the disease. Living with Alzheimer鈥檚. Global variations in diagnosis. Early changes in the brain.

Alzheimer's Special
The latest Global Burden of Disease Study published in the Lancet, which took more than 5 years to complete and covers 50 countries, found that deaths from Alzheimer鈥檚 Disease and other types of dementia have risen more than three-fold between 1990 and 2010. Those aged 65 have a one in 20 chance of developing Alzheimer鈥檚, and those over 80 years old have a one in five chance of developing the disease. So as people in low income countries start to live longer the total numbers are set to rise.

Based in the Indian state of Kerala, Dr Jacob Roy is the Chair of Alzheimer鈥檚 Diseases International, and outlines how a diagnosis is generally made.

Alzheimer鈥檚 Disease involves the loss of significant numbers of brain cells and these changes in brain volume can be seen by comparing scans of the same person taken at different times. Using this technique Dr Maria Vittoria Spampinato, from the Medical University of South Carolina in the USA, has revealed something intriguing about the different ways that male and female brains respond to Alzheimer鈥檚.

As Alzheimer鈥檚 begins to progress, memory loss and confusion are typical symptoms. Retired London dentist Dominic Batty and his wife Jill, who looks after him, tell Health Check what it is like to live with Alzheimer鈥檚.

Many people do not know they have Alzheimer鈥檚. Wherever you live in the world it remains undiagnosed in a high proportion of cases, particularly in the developing world, as Dr Jacob Roy explains.

One of the big mysteries with Alzheimer鈥檚 is why every year, only 10% of people with a diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment go on to develop the disease, while others stay the same and some might even get better. At the Institute of Neurology in London, the work of Professor Nick Fox and others is trying to get to the bottom of this. They suggest that changes in the brain may occur many years before people notice any symptoms.

Available now

18 minutes

Last on

Thu 27 Dec 2012 11:32GMT

Chapters

  • Making a diagnosis

    How medical professionals go about identifying Alzheimer鈥檚

    Duration: 02:10

  • Changes in brain volume

    The different ways that male and female brains respond to Alzheimer鈥檚

    Duration: 02:29

  • Living with Alzheimer鈥檚

    What it is like to be diagnosed and have the disease

    Duration: 04:05

  • Global rates of diagnosis

    The variation round the world in proportion of Alzheimer鈥檚 cases identified

    Duration: 02:17

  • Very early diagnosis

    Changes in the brain that may be occurring many years before symptoms appear

    Duration: 06:27

Broadcasts

  • Boxing Day 2012 19:32GMT
  • Thu 27 Dec 2012 00:32GMT
  • Thu 27 Dec 2012 04:32GMT
  • Thu 27 Dec 2012 11:32GMT

Podcast