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Walking Problems May Signal Later Dementia Risk

 
 
Reply Wed 27 Nov, 2002 06:41 pm
Researchers found that certain walking abnormalities in the elderly may indicate that the person is not getting sufficient blood to the brain. This lack of blood may be correlated with later vascular dementia.



Click Link to Walking/Dementia Article
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Type: Discussion • Score: 1 • Views: 3,235 • Replies: 19
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Setanta
 
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Reply Wed 27 Nov, 2002 07:09 pm
is this like walkin' an' chewin' gum at the same time?
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Phoenix32890
 
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Reply Wed 27 Nov, 2002 07:12 pm
Setanta- I haven't been able to do that since the days of Gerald Ford, who couldn't do it either! Very Happy
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cicerone imposter
 
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Reply Wed 27 Nov, 2002 07:12 pm
My walking has been 'abnormal' for most of my life. I guess dementia is a life-long curse for some of us.... c.i.
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Thinkzinc
 
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Reply Tue 17 Dec, 2002 06:02 pm
I can't remember where I read this, but apparently the same can be the case with Parkinson's disease. I guess it must be a similar mechanism.
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New Haven
 
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Reply Wed 8 Jan, 2003 09:13 am
I thought that balance was regulated primarily by the ear and the cerebellum.

Is the cerebellum a possible cause of dementia? Rolling Eyes
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Phoenix32890
 
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Reply Wed 8 Jan, 2003 09:32 am
New Haven- Damn, Reuters removed the page, and they only archive back to early December. That'll teach me to cut and paste, rather than to provide a link!
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Phoenix32890
 
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Reply Wed 8 Jan, 2003 09:40 am
I went to Google and typed in "abnormal walking/dementia", and it took me back to this thread! Embarrassed
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jjorge
 
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Reply Wed 8 Jan, 2003 09:56 am
Phoenix32890 wrote:
I went to Google and typed in "abnormal walking/dementia", and it took me back to this thread! Embarrassed


That's funny Phoenix....talk about frustration eh?

Well, thanks on the heads up on this interesting topic. I'd wager that we'll be hearing more about it in the future
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Phoenix32890
 
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Reply Wed 8 Jan, 2003 10:22 am
OK this became a real challenge. I don't know how I found this, but I finally found this other, related article:

Quote:
Walking Problems May Predict Dementia, but preventive measures are possible
ED EDELSON



(HealthScout News) - Peculiar kinds of abnormal walking in the elderly can be warning signs of the mind-sapping condition called dementia, a study finds. Although this might sound very scary to an older person who is unsteady on his feet, it's actually good news, researchers say.

"The last thing I want to do is create a panic about walking slower," says Dr. Joe Verghese, assistant professor of neurology at Albert Einstein College of Medicine and lead author of a report on the finding, which appears in tomorrow's issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. /P

"Lots of people have difficulty walking when they get older, and 60 or 70 per cent of the time it is caused by things like arthritis or back trouble," he adds."

The study didn't look at people with walking problems caused by arthritis. But other kinds of abnormal gait are warning signs of vascular dementia, which does not get the name recognition of Alzheimer's disease, the major cause of dementia in the aging, but does account for 30 per cent of cases, Verghese says.

Gait problems included marked swaying, balance trouble, the inability to walk heel-to-toe, short steps, shuffling, not swinging the arms, and difficulty making turns.

"The surprise was how strong a predictor (abnormal gait) was and how it predicted into the future, at least 10 years into the future," Verghese says.

And that is good news because vascular dementia is potentially preventable. It results from diminished flow of blood to the brain, and measures can be taken to keep blood flow at a normal level - "better control of blood pressure, better control of cholesterol," Verghese says.

The finding comes from the Einstein Aging Study, which has followed a large number of older people for more than two decades. This part of the study looked at 422 individuals between the ages of 75 and 85, whose gait was evaluated when they enrolled in the study. In a follow-up period averaging 6.6 years, 70 of the participants developed Alzheimer's disease and 47 developed vascular dementia. The people with neurological gait disorders had more than three times the risk of vascular dementia than those with normal gaits, although their risk of Alzheimer's disease was not affected.

It was known when the study began that an older person with dementia who had difficulty walking was more likely to have the vascular form, says Dr. Richard Lipton, the Lotti and Bernard Benson Faculty Scholar in Alzheimer's Disease at Einstein, who heads the aging study.

"What wasn't known previously, that this predicted the future development of vascular dementia, even a decade before diagnosis," he says.

Lipton sees the discovery as part of "a really fantastic shift in the field in the past two decades, from the view that dementia is not treatable. Two decades ago, the hope was finding the 10 per cent of cases that might be treatable," he says.

"Today, we have three approved drugs for Alzheimer's disease, and some are also effective for vascular dementia. Already the condition has shifted from being rarely treatable to being almost always treatable," he adds.

The next transition, Lipton says, "is to make these conditions preventable. Treatment today does slow progression but is not fully curative."

Several preventive trials are under way, using a variety of drugs, ranging from estrogens to nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, Lipton says, "and the key to developing preventive intervention is to develop robust methods of identifying people at high risk."

The finding that an abnormal walking pattern can be a long-term warning of dementia can help doctors start preventive therapy early, he says.

What To Do

You can get insight into dementia from the nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/dementia.html - National Library of Medicine or the nia.nih.gov/health/agepages/forgetfulness.htm - National Institute on Aging.


© Scout News


I think that I will change my avatar to a bulldog! Laughing
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marycat
 
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Reply Wed 8 Jan, 2003 10:39 am
That's fascinating, Phoenix. Thank you for doing the research to find the article!
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Phoenix32890
 
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Reply Wed 8 Jan, 2003 10:39 am
Here's the abstract from the original study from the New England Journal of Medicine:


http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/abstract/347/22/1761


You may have to subscribe to get access to this, but that is no big deal![/b]
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williamhenry3
 
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Reply Wed 8 Jan, 2003 11:33 am
Phoenix<

Thanks for this information. You are always helpful.

I have had osteoarthritis of the severe kind for most of my adult life. Even though the study cited eliminated patients with arthritis, it is still something to watch out for when I become "elderly."

I am planning some knee surgery in 2003 to eliminate some terrible pain. But, cheer up, at least I can still walk unaided. Very Happy
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cicerone imposter
 
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Reply Wed 8 Jan, 2003 01:32 pm
williamhenry, It seems to me, atleast, that knee problems is on the increase. A retired professor friend of mine had knee surgery last year, and my brother-in-law is having knee surgery this year too! My brother-in-law is a dentist, and started his profession way before I even finished my college education, but because he was hurt by the stock market during the past three years, he needs to continue working. I retired four years ago. My wife's friend has suffered from arthritis for many years, and still seems to be very active even though she must be suffering great pain. Her hands have been distorted for at least 20 years. My wife is amazed at her ability to continue in her active lifestyle. c.i.
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Phoenix32890
 
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Reply Wed 8 Jan, 2003 02:37 pm
c.i.- In my area, which is a 55+ community, people are lining up to have hip and knee replacements. I think that this increase in these procedures are due to a number of factors:

People are living longer, and maintain a more energetic lifestyle at an older age that did generations that came before us. There are 90 year olds in my area who won't miss a good golf game.

It is very possible that some knee and hip problems are happening as a result of a more active lifestyle at an older age. I really believe that some of my back problems were exascerbated by the intense high impact aerobics that I used to do in my fifties.

The procedures themselves have become easier and safer for the patient, the doctors have more expertise and experience with them than in the past. Therefore, they are more apt to encourage a surgical procedure, rather than medical management of the condition
.
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cicerone imposter
 
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Reply Wed 8 Jan, 2003 02:47 pm
Thanks Phoenix, Good points all! With the population swing towards longer and more active lifestyles, that makes a lot of sense. c.i.
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New Haven
 
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Reply Wed 8 Jan, 2003 02:54 pm
What's happening in Florida to cause so many hip/knee problems?

Is there a shortage of calcium down there?
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Phoenix32890
 
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Reply Wed 8 Jan, 2003 03:13 pm
New Haven- No shortage of calcium. Maybe the people here just push beyond what their bones are able to handle!

My next door neighbor (who is not an old man) loved to play on the softball team. He just had a new knee put in. Another guy on the team (also relatively young, and in good shape) tore a rotator cuff on this same baseball team, and had to have surgery. I could go on and on.
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marycat
 
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Reply Wed 8 Jan, 2003 03:21 pm
Is it tackle baseball?
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Phoenix32890
 
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Reply Wed 8 Jan, 2003 03:24 pm
marycat- No!, Laughing but the way that I heard it, the younger guys run for the older ones. That puts a double whammy on the younger players!
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