Worlds Youngest diagnosis of Dementia boy age 19

hollydolly

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Doctors in China have identified the world’s youngest case of Alzheimer’s disease in a 19-year-old, yet scientists are baffled as to how he developed the memory-robbing condition at such a young age.

The unnamed teen boy first began experiencing memory decline at 17. He often forgot what he did the day before and was always misplacing his belongings. He was eventually unable to graduate from high school, though he could still live on his own.

Before he was formally diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer's, the teen was sent to a memory care clinic for about a year, where experts found that his overall memory score was 82 percent lower than that of his peers of the same age and his immediate memory score was 87 percent lower.

In 2022, brain scans showed shrinkage in the hippocampus, a crucial memory formation region in the brain and one of the first areas affected by Alzheimer's, the most common form of dementia that affects roughly 6.7 million Americans.

Doctors at that clinic analyzed his cerebrospinal fluid and detected telltale markers of the disease, including abnormal levels of amyloid and tau proteins.

When they conducted a thorough search of his DNA for mutations that made him more susceptible to the disease, they found nothing.

Alzheimer's is typically a disease of the elderly, but recent studies have suggested rates among people under 50 are on the rise.

According to a report from Blue Cross Blue Shield, diagnoses among commercially insured adults aged 30 to 64 surged by 200 percent between 2013 and 2017.
read the full story here...
Teen boy, 19, believed to be youngest person to ever with dementia
 

Not trying to make stupid assertions but did he have any drug problems? It probably doesn't apply here but I have noticed many celebrities with memory problems had a history of drug abuse.
Not only that, Babs, but I believe melatonin, anti-depressants, sleeping pills, and other drugs take their toll on brain health too.
 

IF they can find something that shows some DNA abnormalities (I know, they have found nothing so far), it could advance knowledge of the disease and something good could come of this. One can hope.
 
I don’t remember hearing about previous generations having the dementia problem as much but that might be because I have lived a somewhat sheltered life comparably.
But if that were to hold true then it is being caused by something that is more prevalent in our day and age like food additives or God only knows what.
Maybe they can figure out what one person is exposed to more than the next.
My former cardiologist noticed that I was having allergic reactions to something because I was coughing and hacking and we figured it was food related.
He told me to just eat as bland of a diet as I could and pay attention as I added things into my diet.
That is how I found out that I have an allergy to sugar.
Being as how sugar is in everything, naturally and also added, I react to it all of the time.
The more concentrated the sugar as in sweets the more reaction I have and the longer the reaction lasts.
Being a person of limited will power I sometimes cough for a long time after I get the urge for sweets.
 
I don’t remember hearing about previous generations having the dementia problem as much but that might be because I have lived a somewhat sheltered life comparably.


it certainly isnt a new problem = perhaps you didnt hear about older peoples issues as much when you were younger.

Also as life expectancy increases more people will be living long enough get dementia in old age - so prevalence may be increasing on account of that.
 
I don’t remember hearing about previous generations having the dementia problem as much but that might be because I have lived a somewhat sheltered life comparably.
But if that were to hold true then it is being caused by something that is more prevalent in our day and age like food additives or God only knows what.
Maybe they can figure out what one person is exposed to more than the next.
My former cardiologist noticed that I was having allergic reactions to something because I was coughing and hacking and we figured it was food related.
He told me to just eat as bland of a diet as I could and pay attention as I added things into my diet.
That is how I found out that I have an allergy to sugar.
Being as how sugar is in everything, naturally and also added, I react to it all of the time.
The more concentrated the sugar as in sweets the more reaction I have and the longer the reaction lasts.
Being a person of limited will power I sometimes cough for a long time after I get the urge for sweets.
I was talking about it yesterday with my sister who has been a cardiologist. She thought it was caused by pesticides, that people get it so young.

I wondered if it was caused by sugar, artificial sweeteners (saw yesterday that some chemist had said that aspartame turned into formaldehyde) and pesticides.

Because Parkinson is caused by pesticides as is Parkinson dementia, so maybe also other forms of Alzheimer.

AI says:
In essence, while the chemical pathway to formaldehyde exists, regulatory agencies generally find the levels produced from normal consumption to be safe, but some scientific literature and anecdotal reports point to potential issues with high intake or sensitive individuals.

Alzheimer Netherlands says:
The question is whether people who work with pesticides develop dementia more often than those who don't. And if so, where do we draw the line? Are local residents also at risk, or even people who buy sprayed vegetables in the supermarket? In 2020, scientists reviewed all the research in this area and were unable to answer this question. Even for people who work extensively with pesticides, the studies contradict each other. Some see an effect, some don't, and there are even studies that show less dementia in people who use pesticides. There's more than just dementia Of course, there are many more diseases than just dementia. The relationship between pesticides and cancer, lung disease, and Parkinson's disease seems to be clearer. Parkinson's disease itself is a risk factor for (Parkinson's) dementia.



Sugar- and artificially-sweetened beverages and the risks of incident stroke and dementia: A prospective cohort study - PMC
After adjustments for age, sex, education (for analysis of dementia), caloric intake, diet quality, physical activity and smoking, higher recent and higher cumulative intake of artificially-sweetened soft drinks were associated with an increased risk of ischemic stroke, all-cause dementia, and AD dementia. When comparing daily cumulative intake to <1 per week (reference), the hazard ratios were 2.96 (95% CI, 1.26–6.97) for ischemic stroke and 2.89 (95% CI, 1.18–7.07) for AD. Sugar-sweetened beverages were not associated with stroke or dementia.

Can Aspartame Cause Alzheimer’s? | Sandy Springs

Excessively using aspartame and similar products affects cortisol levels in the body. It also alters neurotransmitters and changes how the brain communicates with specific systems.

This then increases the risk of inflammation and damage to cells throughout the brain. So while artificial sweeteners can’t specifically cause Alzheimer’s, they do contribute to the disease’s development.


It's weird anyway that we eat fruit and vegetables with poison, but also candy, chips, soda, all that unhealthy stuff. If someone gave it to their dog or cat people would be outraged, but yourself that's fine.
 
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I'm firmly of the belief it's caused by additives either in the food or in the water...
There's no way to know what percentages can be attributed to those, but they certainly aren't helping matters any.

We keep a pesticide free house and garden. When unwelcome bugs show up we manage them with diatomaceous earth or similarly inert products.

I dearly wish many artificial additives would be highly regulated, if not outlawed, in the US.
 


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