Affirmative Action Debate

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Angel Brown

Professor Ditouras

English 102

21 August 2012

Alzheimer’s Disease

Alzheimer’s disease is relentlessly destroying the brains and lives of our nation’s older adults, robbing them of memory, the ability to reason, and affecting their emotions and behavior. Alzheimer’s disease is a degenerative disorder of the brain. The longer we live the greater the risk: one out of every two Americans aged 85 and older and one out of every 10 aged 65 and older are afflicted with the disease. It affects two groups of people: those with the disease and the loved ones who care for them. By the year 2050, an estimated 14 million Americans will be in its grip (Medina xi, 2).

Alzheimer’s disease is a progressive disease of the brain, which is characterized by a gradual loss of memory and other mental functions. Alzheimer’s is the most common form of dementia-a general term referring to loss of memory and the ability to think, reason, function, and behave appropriately (Medina 4). The word dementia is derived from two Latin words, which mean away and mind, respectively (Goldmann 2). It’s different from the mild forgetfulness normally observed in older people. Over the course of the disease, people with AD no longer recognize themselves or much about the world around them (Medina 4).

Alzheimer’s is marked by abnormal clumps, called senile plaques, and irregular knots, called neurofibrillary tangles, of brain cells. The plaque is an accumulation of an abnormal protein, amyloid. One theory regarding the cause of Alzheimer’s disease suggests that this

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plaque forms because the processes that normally operate to clear away this protein have become defective. Neurofibrillary tangles are skeins of another abnormal protein, but the tangle is found inside the nerve cells. The reason why the...