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Thread: David Cassidy

  1. #1
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    David Cassidy

    Has dementia and is only 66.

  2. #2
    Senior Member Teacher Terry's Avatar
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    That is sad. A good friend of mine got it in her 50's and by 64 was in a home. It is a horrible disease.

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    A friend's husband was diagnosed with early onset at 55 and is now having to go into a memory care unit. He is not 60 yet. The symptoms developed very fast.

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    I hate hearing about people this young with dementia, mostly because I guess I'm scared I will get it, as my mom has it, and I'm 60 now. So I am always calculating, how many more good years do I have?

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    Senior Member iris lilies's Avatar
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    Last week I made a logic error and told DH "well, there we go, Alzheimer's logic!" and in addition to that I made two errors of timing that are a bit worrisome.

    But whatever, I cant do any thing about it, and as I remind DH, he will be in for a fun ride on the Alzheimer's train.

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    Senior Member CathyA's Avatar
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    I think it's important to not confuse some of the developments with growing older with Alzheimer's. DH and I both are forgetting tons of words. I've always been told by the doc that people who have Alzheimer's don't appreciate that they are losing their memory or making mistakes. I hope that's true, 'cause all my memory losses bug the hell out of me.

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    Senior Member JaneV2.0's Avatar
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    There are ways to mitigate the likelihood of getting Alzheimer's. Genes aren't always destiny. (I've posted this before, but it bears repeating.)

    http://newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/me...for-first-time

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    Senior Member Teacher Terry's Avatar
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    IL: men aren't as good as women as dealing with a chronic major illness. My friend's parents had been married 50 years when the Mom got it. He put her in a home so fast and divorced her. Then a 30 yo nurses aid made a play for him and he married her. The doctor's said that my friend got it so young because her cancer came back 8x's so she had chemo that many times. She would have died without the chemo because she had stage 4 cancer and lived 20 years. I read that what you are describing is normal. what is not is something like putting keys in the refrigerator.

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    Quote Originally Posted by CathyA View Post
    I think it's important to not confuse some of the developments with growing older with Alzheimer's. DH and I both are forgetting tons of words. I've always been told by the doc that people who have Alzheimer's don't appreciate that they are losing their memory or making mistakes. I hope that's true, 'cause all my memory losses bug the hell out of me.
    Drives me nuts too, the forgetting words!

    I feel better about it since a doctor friend told me it's called "nominal aphasia" (inability to remember nouns) and that it's really common and a sign of aging rather than necessarily a sign of anything dire.

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    Dementia isn't always about memory loss because it can affect people in other ways too.

    When I have my seasonal affective disorder symptoms or feel grumpy for several days or have more of my sleep disorder problems, it makes me wonder if I am in the early stages of it.

    Terry, that is deplorable that a man would leave his sick wife after 50 years of marriage, - makes me wonder if he also has dementia.

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