For more medicine videos consider subscribing (if you found any of the info useful!): kzbin.info/door/Rks8wB6vgz0E7buP0L_5RQ Patreon: www.patreon.com/rhesusmedicine Buy Us A Coffee!: www.buymeacoffee.com/rhesusmedicine Video Timestamps: 0:00 What is Dementia? 0:47 Dementia Sign and Symptoms (Dementia Timeline) 1:12 Dementia Symptoms - Pre Dementia 1:41 Dementia Symptoms - Early Stage 2:03 Dementia Symptoms - Middle Stage 2:33 Dementia Symptoms - Late Stage 3:45 Alzheimer’s Disease 5:29 Vascular Dementia 7:03 Dementia With Lewy Bodies (Lewy Body Dementia) 8:09 Frontotemporal Dementia 9:23 Dementia Risk Factors 11:36 Dementia Diagnosis 12:58 Dementia Treatment
@WitoldBanasik Жыл бұрын
Thank you your in-depth analysis of dementia. My mom had been suffering from dementia for over 10 years.. Well we as Her closest family members had been suffering with Her to tell you the truth. Her late onset of the dementia was slower because of Her extremely active social and professional life, she got her doctorate and was a poetess as well. Anyway later on She got issues with Her eyesight, and was tackling with very serious eye diseases; that cut Her activity short and speeding Her dementia. Passed away peacefully in Her sleep, aged 98. R.I.P. Mom.
@everythangluxury3 ай бұрын
Just lost my Mom Apr. 6, 2024 to Lewy body dementia. It to this day has been the most horrible experience I've ever had. I miss my Mom more than anything in life. This is a horrible disease. I watched it reduce my Mom to a vegetable. I will need therapy for the rest of my life. I was fortunate enough to start recording the after effects of her melt downs for the past 2 year's. My ultimate goal is to make a movie about the experience. THE WORLD NEEDS TO KNOW MORE ABOUT THIS DISEASE ❗️❗️God bless you for taking care of your Mom. It's an ELITE category for anyone who survives such an ordeal.
@MamaUnscripted4 ай бұрын
My 71 year old mother has vascular dementia due an undiagnosed PFO as a baby. We've made a channel for her under this account name. Hope those who want to see light hearted times will enjoy the videos. :)
@claudianavarro97082 ай бұрын
What is PFO?
@JAE051513 ай бұрын
As someone with Dementia this was very helpful ❤
@jimprior57004 ай бұрын
My wife had LBD and I am shocked at how many medical profesionals did not recognize it. They were aware of the symptoms. We know it could not be cured but the family could have been helped in dealing with and helping her.
@rebeccacruse91636 ай бұрын
you have a very soothing voice. very pleasant to listen to. I hear a lot of voices and yours is the nicest. I work with dementia patients so this video was very helpful to me. My Paternal grandmother recently died of vascular dementia. So I thank you this video was very helpful to me. I work with the people and it is hard to understand some days. My grandma smoked since she was 10 years old. so she definitely raised her risk. Thank you again please keep these videos coming
@MrXrisd017 ай бұрын
This was perfect! Thank you. Studying for a NP exam
@thuruvekererajasekhar6459 Жыл бұрын
Excellent presentation very easy to understand and visualize the discription would like to hear more diseases
@RhesusMedicine Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@maciejwilgucki3783Ай бұрын
I loved this informative video with great visual presentation!
@narada6329 Жыл бұрын
Holy, this is a good presentation. Thanks!
@KidStudies Жыл бұрын
THE best video on this topic
@RhesusMedicine Жыл бұрын
Very much appreciated!
@riadhbouzaiene5820 Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for this. The best I've seen on the subject !
@RhesusMedicine Жыл бұрын
Glad it was helpful! Thanks 😀
@binoddas3951 Жыл бұрын
Excellent presentation. Thank you so much
@RhesusMedicine Жыл бұрын
Thank you for watching 😊
@drew93126 ай бұрын
Excellent, well-pitched summary. Thanks.
@Fact24h1554 ай бұрын
Merci pour cette vidéo très informative ! J’ai une question : comment peut-on différencier les premiers signes de la démence des simples oublis liés à l’âge ?
@HILAROGO Жыл бұрын
soo good! thank you!!
@andersbanders142017 күн бұрын
Cover your right eye look at a black dot for 3 seconds with you left eye close it, then look at a red dot for 6 seconds while covering your left eye. Close them and look at an orange bright light like the Sun or so. Close them. Open them after 4 seconds.
@andersbanders142017 күн бұрын
It, not them, as in TOGETHER!!!!!
@andersbanders142017 күн бұрын
It, not them, as in TOGETHER!!
@andersbanders142017 күн бұрын
Friend
@andersbanders142017 күн бұрын
Think Carrots 🥕 in the end.
@andersbanders142017 күн бұрын
Woops made a mistake. It's light blue 🔵 dot, not black.😊
@missynataliasaputra Жыл бұрын
What about dementia caused by hemorrhagic stroke? Ruptured brain aneurysms.
@tomravenscraft35826 ай бұрын
Amazing video!
@arjunnain258610 ай бұрын
I'm having all these symptoms at age of 21, repetitive same kind of thoughts can't remember what I'm writing and losing memory, thoughts like i will die and forget everything what should i do and which doctor should i visit? please help I'm at the stage where i want to die and get rid of all this. is this even cureable.
@Bubbles_885689 ай бұрын
It’s sounds like this is stress related/ trauma/ anxiety. If so think about what things are/have concerned you if so maybe get therapy to help with coping mechanisms.
@TheWiseOldOwl-d3x5 ай бұрын
Visit a psychiatrist first. If he feels he needs to refer you to some other speciality, he will.
@ronaalexander825Ай бұрын
I highly recommend that you see an internist ASAP. They can help you sort out the causes of your symptoms. You may need nutrient deficiency tests, toxicity panels, CT scans, and an appointment with an environmental specialist. Some of your symptoms sound like Mercury toxicity. Others seem like stroke or TIA symptoms.
Dementia patients may not know they have dementia.
@leonleone2580 Жыл бұрын
To put it briefly, one can describe the disease with, out of control
@pandemicnova Жыл бұрын
It's hell. Being conscious and aware of your behavior and lacking the ability to control yourself is living hell.
@everythangluxury3 ай бұрын
The most fucked up experience I've EVER had in my life. There's a reason the suicide rate is over 65%. It literally will push you to the limits. Suicide crossed my mind several times. It paralyzes you and makes you feel helpless. This is why it is important to get help early on. Because once you get locked into your routine you feel trapped and unable to do anything. I was unable to leave my Mom until her later stages. She lost her ability to walk. Only then could i leave and when i came back the house would smell like a public bathroom because of her incontinence. I literally dreaded getting up each day because i became my Momz slave. She finally passed Apr. 6, 2024. I watched her die😢
@rosannewright3551 Жыл бұрын
How to understand dementia?
@lindaabrahams357410 ай бұрын
Need help my daughter off years of age had developed dis design .dnt no what to do pls help
@andersbanders142016 күн бұрын
Try left eye light blue lense, right eye orange lenses, or just wear orange lenses. Orange fruit moistures on left eye. your mems fine. It's your logical left eye that's over powered. Sugar from 🍊 i, the second guess .
@andersbanders142016 күн бұрын
Left light blue lense, right red lense maybe. Well the answers in there somewhere, most likely. Peace.
@breckenyoder63516 күн бұрын
do YOU have dementia? 😭
@SomeBelgian3 ай бұрын
imagine having dementia
@stefyguereschi Жыл бұрын
THANK for Ckear explanation💚🧡🌷
@RhesusMedicine Жыл бұрын
Thank you for watching 😊
@stefyguereschi Жыл бұрын
THANK 🌹
@AmandaAllen-c2q Жыл бұрын
My grammy(moms mom) is battling Alzeimers now..its so heartbreaking to see my best friend go away like she is and knowong that there is NOTHING that i can do to stop it.
@joysamuel6318 Жыл бұрын
Have you tried mushroom and other psychedelic products, I believe you should give it a chance
@joysamuel6318 Жыл бұрын
Lion's mane mushroom and its extract have been shown to have various health benefits. Research has found that lion's mane may protect against dementia, reduce mild symptoms of anxiety and depression, and help repair nerve damage.
@joysamuel6318 Жыл бұрын
All thanks to Dwayne_myco, who's a mycologist, He's really helped a lot of patient suffering from dementia, depression and anxiety to come out of it. Yeah, Dwayne_myco
@joysamuel6318 Жыл бұрын
On instagram
@liberalbias446211 ай бұрын
@@joysamuel6318😢
@robynfoss9449 Жыл бұрын
Dementia like Alzheimer's and brain injury all have one thing in common. A blockage of blood flow through the neck, through the arteries that feed the brain its life sustenance blood. When this gets pinched off from tight muscles, trauma, ankylo spondylosis that blood flow is decreased and the frontal lobe of the brain is the farthest away from the arteries that comes through the neck so that is the first part that gets starved for memory, Behavior, Etc. The medical community is missing totally what the main sustenance for the brain needs as blood flow, otherwise cells die in the brain
@lindyft1488 Жыл бұрын
How they have found some meds if they know what's going on
@markwaller13 Жыл бұрын
Thanks I've had a lot of strokes and I have clogged arteries in my neck and this explains a lot of what I'm going through.. 6:32
@kylepena890811 ай бұрын
Wow! You solved it all!
@struck.kobe19999 ай бұрын
This is highly inaccurate, you should delete this post before anyone believes it -
@outorii46599 ай бұрын
You completely ignored every fact in the video. He literally said Altzheimers was due to the development of plaques in the brain, it has NOTHING to do with blood flow, that’s Vascular dementia.
@sylvianazareth908 Жыл бұрын
My Mum Mary Alice Cooper who had Dementia disease in AZAMENTIA OF LOSING HER MEMORY. SHE TOLD ME THAT I was not her daughter. I was crying in front of her. She passed away on the month of February 2004. She was buried in Dorking Cementry. From Sylvia Nazareth.
@adonyisrael1724 Жыл бұрын
Oh my! I’m so sorry to hear she told you that but I hope you knew it was her dementia, right? My mom has become more verbally abusive, telling me I am lying to her & trying to make her crazy by telling her she has memory loss! Yesterday I blew up at her and I had to pray and ask God to forgive me for losing it but I have no help from other siblings and I’m with her like almost 24/7!!! 😞
@Sarah-qx4vz Жыл бұрын
@@adonyisrael1724it’s hard for us to forgive ourselves for losing our temper, but it’s normal. You’re not a bad person. The weight you carry in your shoulders, doing this alone no less! It’s tremendously stressful. My grandma used to say my dad was dangerous and that he was an imposter. She also got hostile with all of us. It destroyed my mom and when my grandma finally died, it was painful for my mom but she needed the suffering to end.
@adonyisrael1724 Жыл бұрын
@@Sarah-qx4vz I’ve asked God to help me with Patience and He has, I just remember it’s not her but her dementia and as long as I keep realizing that, I’m good! I’m learning how to be more creative on handling her forgetfulness and I’ve turned it into a “game” for myself and now she & I laugh when she says “I don’t remember Dear!” 😃
@ronaalexander825Ай бұрын
@@adonyisrael1724 Look up Teepa Snow. She has a vast amount of informative videos on dementia.
@iamstephenbisland Жыл бұрын
Could you help me to clarify something if you have a moment. Is all dementia caused by progressive neurodegenerative disease? What if it is vascular dementia, would this still be considered as neurodegenerative disease? The same with traumatic brain injury leading to dementia? I'm finding it hard to find an answer to this online. Thank you and thank you for the video.
@berylsandra Жыл бұрын
Dementia itself is a progreesive disorder.... any type of dementia worsens with age
@north10 Жыл бұрын
Dementia is the umbrella term for all progressive neurodegenerative diseases (i.e., permanent and progressive neuronal death). Vascular dementia is considered a neurodegenerative disease because it creates unrepairable damage to nervous tissue, which leads to complications in the central nervous system (i.e., cognitive decline, daily life impairment, motor problems and much more). It's called "vascular" dementia to distinguish the etiology (i.e., the cause) of the disease.
@kerryeastlake88124 ай бұрын
My mum has vascular disease
@amandabcilley5 ай бұрын
Sounds like my ADHD
@breckenyoder63516 күн бұрын
no fr, i’m freaking out abt how im gonna recognize if i get dementia cuz it’ll all be the same 😭
@interactive1178Ай бұрын
Dementia is sad.
@Marioloverr20126 ай бұрын
Now i know what dementia is Now i know what dementia is Now i know what dementia is Now i know what dem-
@KenChan-d2k10 ай бұрын
Existence in this world is horrible.
@iKER.eNEKO_19983 ай бұрын
Dimension
@jrrj-c3w9 ай бұрын
If I could reverse this..... = what? Make me an offer.
@RumbleFish698 ай бұрын
Any information past 4 minutes on this video does me no good. I won't remember it and I already got the information that I needed in the first couple of minutes. I vaguely remember my doctor saying something to this effect, as far as time. And, if that information is accurate, then I am looking at about 4 years before I become a fckn potato. I'm so fckn angry! What can anyone say to any of this? I knew this was coming because it runs in my family. Still, my grandmother was 89 years old when it took her out. Right now, I am exactly 30 years away from the age she was when she died. My condition seems to be getting worse and worse and I live alone, which is the only concern I have. And, the worst thing is that I have a shitty relationship with my friends and kids, so I am not even going to tell any of them. I wouldn't place this burden on friends and family anyway. The less they know, the better it is for them. I suppose the only thing that I can do is try and die with dignity when my time comes; like my grandmother did. Man, this is all kinds of fckd up.
@lizzynatir908310 ай бұрын
Great things Dr Madida on KZbin has being doing for mankind, I undergo his Parkinson disease treatment🌿🌿 plan for weeks and my Parkinson Disease was completely reversed...
@danielg5240 Жыл бұрын
The description of lewy body disease is wrong.
@colettebehan57629 ай бұрын
What is your description?
@everythangluxury3 ай бұрын
No. It is actually EXTREMELY accurate. I just lost my Mom to it APR. 6, 2024❗️She showed and displayed ALL OF THOSE SYMPTOMS ❗️Her last stage was her inability to walk, talk and even swallow. She died from aspiration pneumonia. It was HORRIBLE ❗️🤬
@elinbird002 ай бұрын
Sounds like me at 15 rn 😭
@pandemicnova Жыл бұрын
Please help me
@joysamuel6318 Жыл бұрын
Have you tried mushroom and other psychedelic products, I believe you should give it a chance
@joysamuel6318 Жыл бұрын
Lion's mane mushroom and its extract have been shown to have various health benefits. Research has found that lion's mane may protect against dementia, reduce mild symptoms of anxiety and depression, and help repair nerve damage.
@joysamuel6318 Жыл бұрын
All thanks to Dwayne_myco, who's a mycologist, He's really helped a lot of patient suffering from dementia, depression and anxiety to come out of it. Yeah Dwayne_myco
@joysamuel6318 Жыл бұрын
On instagram
@royalhaze425425 күн бұрын
can someone explain to me how come only people in the west have dementia? I never heard of that here. same as adhd, that doesnt exist outside of western countries
@jordkinsmith35884 ай бұрын
Who’s here after Biden called Zelensky “President Putin”? 😂
@interactive1178Ай бұрын
Trump 24
@yaymint Жыл бұрын
Biden
@ericafitzgerald Жыл бұрын
*Trump
@margueritemazzeo29048 ай бұрын
Both.😅
@scorpionsdogG64 Жыл бұрын
👀🤏😭🤦🏾💀🕺
@adonyisrael1724 Жыл бұрын
Question: why does a dementia patient refuse to bathe, get dressed and ready to get out to socialize?!?! I’m drained trying to encourage my mother to do these things! I had to stop begging her!!! I see her just sitting there in her bedroom so miserable, depressed but much of this has been her life, sadness, depressed, miserable! Seems like dementia has increased this for her! 😣
@ShiggyMomo Жыл бұрын
She might've quite literally forgotten *how* to bathe or do any rudimentary tasks.
@adonyisrael1724 Жыл бұрын
@@ShiggyMomo No, not yet, she wakes up, walks to bathroom, makes herself a cup of coffee, puts away everything so she still remembers how to do those things, thank God! She will sponge bathe instead of getting her things ready to bathe, easier just to wash up but she still smells! She needs to wash her body well. I even offer to help her prepare for her bath! But she just refuses to take one. I’m drained! 😣
@lindyft1488 Жыл бұрын
You have to tell her that she's going to visit her mom n needs to take a shower but I don't think at this age she needs to bath every day try once a week or 2x
@outorii46599 ай бұрын
@@adonyisrael1724I witnessed this with my mom, unfortunately hygiene and self care is the quickest ability thats lost, talking them into it doesn’t compute. Same things with socializing, using logic doesn’t work. I wish I had some advice but honestly I don’t, it’s a terrible disease and our medical system has very few accommodations for them or their caregivers.
@adonyisrael17249 ай бұрын
@@outorii4659 Thank you, I appreciate your input! 💕
@andrewblack449911 ай бұрын
Let’s all give this guy a clap for reading out of a fucking textbook. Thank you man.