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Parkinson's disease, also known as parkinson's paralysis, is a neurological degenerative disease, a disease of the extrapyramidal system, also known as a movement disorder, which is common in the elderly, especially those over 60 years old.
The core symptoms are decreased and slowed movements, dystonia and resting tremor, of which slowing down and slowing down of movements is the most core symptom. Of course, there are also some non-motor symptoms, such as sensory loss, loss of smell, cognitive decline, sleep disorders, emotional disorders and other non-motor symptoms are also common manifestations of Parkinson's disease.
Alzheimer's disease is also known as Alzheimer's disease. It is a degenerative lesion of the central nervous system that occurs in the elderly (generally refers to people over 60 years old in China) and pre-old age (45 to 59 years old), characterized by progressive cognitive dysfunction and behavioral impairment.
It is the most common type of dementia in old age, accounting for 50 70 of senile dementia.
The two are not the same, but both are more common in the elderly. Parkinson's disease is mainly manifested in extrapyramidal lesions, and Alzheimer's disease is manifested in cerebral cortex dysfunction.
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Parkinson's and Alzheimer's disease are not the same disease, but two different diseases, Parkinson's mainly refers to the formation of disorders in movement, and it is easy to have slow movements, while Alzheimer's disease is mainly worth forming a disorder in the central nervous system, cognitive ability will decline, and memory will also decline.
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First of all, Parkinson's disease is a common degenerative disease of the nervous system in the elderly, and then Alzheimer's disease generally refers to Alzheimer's disease, and Alzheimer's disease is a progressive degenerative disease of the nervous system with insidious onset, so the common point between the two is that the elderly are a high-incidence group, but Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease are not the same disease!
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Parkinson's disease, also known as parkinsonism, is commonly associated with progressive bradykinesia, resting tremor, muscle rigidity, postural adjustment disorders, and in severe cases, memory impairment and dementia. The cause of Parkinson's disease is unknown, and most scholars believe that it is due to a decrease in dopamine.
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Hello, these are two diseases, but at a certain stage there will be the same manifestations of memory loss.
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Parkinson's disease does not belong to Alzheimer's disease, the two are not the same type of disease, the scientific name of Alzheimer's disease is Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease is a movement disorder, patients mainly manifest as movement disorders, such as resting tremor, muscle rigidity, bradykinesia and dystonia. Patients with Parkinson's disease may have special faces, such as mask faces, reduced changes in the patient's expression, reduced blink of eye, dull gaze, can be accompanied by salivation at the corners of the mouth, symptoms similar to the manifestations of dementia, but the impact of intelligence and response is not very serious, not memory loss, dementia is the main manifestation, Parkinson's ** program and Alzheimer's disease are not the same, the pathogenesis is different, the medication will be different, it is recommended to go to the neurology department for regular treatment, according to the face-to-face examination to confirm the diagnosis.
Parkinson's disease is not senile dementia, it belongs to two different diseases, Parkinson's disease and senile dementia are both common neurodegenerative diseases in the elderly, but the pathogenesis and clinical manifestations are different. Parkinson's disease is mainly manifested by shaking, slow walking, drooling and constipation, while senile dementia generally refers to memory loss, cognitive decline, and in the later stage, there is no family member at all.
In addition to the different clinical manifestations of Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease, there is also a certain degree of crossover of symptoms between the two diseases, such as Parkinson's disease can also have cognitive decline in the later stage, or even in the middle stage, and the degree of decline can even reach the standard of dementia. In some patients with Alzheimer's disease, in addition to memory loss, a small number of patients can also have some symptoms of Parkinson's disease, such as shaking and memory loss. Although the clinical symptoms of the two overlap, the pathological manifestations are different.
Generally, the drugs are also different, and the main drugs for Parkinson's disease are levodopa, receptor agonists, amantadine and trihexyphenidyl and so on, and drugs to improve memory are also needed. Alzheimer's disease is mainly cholinesterase inhibitors, such as donepezil, memantine, etc.
Parkinson's disease is not senile dementia, senile dementia is mainly Alzheimer's disease, and it is currently the first most common neurodegenerative disease in the elderly population. Parkinson's disease is not senile dementia, senile dementia is mainly Alzheimer's disease, and it is currently the first most common neurodegenerative disease in the elderly population. If this problem is postponed, in addition to Alzheimer's disease, dementia in old age also includes dementia with Lewy bodies, frontotemporal dementia, and of course, some patients with Parkinson's disease itself will develop dementia, which is called Parkinson's dementia, called PDD.
Parkinson's dementia is mainly a kind of subcortical dementia, and people often say that senile dementia, like Alzheimer's disease is mainly cortical dementia, cortical dementia, there are essential differences, through the assessment of neuropsychological scales, including multi-dimensional cognitive assessment, its memory, attention, executive function, calculation, including visuospatial ability, multi-dimensional scale assessment can find the difference between the two.
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Parkinson's disease is not Parkinson's disease. However, Parkinson's disease can also lead to cognitive decline over many years, but not Alzheimer's. There are many causes of Alzheimer's disease, 60%-80% of the first symptoms are forgetfulness, memory loss, and then other cognitive impairments, such as language impairment, comprehension, and cognitive judgment will decline.
However, Parkinson's disease is different in that it does not affect memory in the early stage, and the clinical manifestations are mainly hypertonia, sluggish movements, and involuntary resting tremor
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Parkinson's disease is not Alzheimer's disease. Symptoms of Parkinson's disease are dyskinesia, bradykinesia, tremor, and abnormal posture and gait. Alzheimer's disease has many kinds**.
For example, Alzheimer's disease or other degenerative dementia mainly includes memory loss or abnormal mental behavior, and the symptoms are still different from Parkinson's disease.
However, with the progression of Parkinson's disease, memory loss, mental and emotional abnormalities, and even hallucinations can also occur in the late stage of Parkinson's disease, which is called Parkinson's disease dementia.
In general, Parkinson's disease is not Alzheimer's disease, but Parkinson's disease can present with symptoms of dementia, especially in the middle and late stages of the disease.
In the early and middle stages of Parkinson's disease, the development of symptoms can be delayed through drugs and surgery, especially brain pacemaker surgery, which can greatly control shaking, stiffness, procrastination, and abnormal movements, and can reduce the dosage by about 30%, which has a good effect on improving the quality of life of patients. In 1998, China entered the brain pacemaker surgery technology, and most patients were implanted with Medtronic brain pacemakers in the early days, and many patients still maintain normal human behavior and life. However, there is currently no surgical technique to control the symptoms of Alzheimer's disease.
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Parkinson's disease is not senile dementia, Parkinson's disease is a degenerative disease with extrapyramidal system as the main manifestation, which can be manifested as resting tremor, slowed movement, muscle rigidity and postural disorders. As the disease progresses, many Parkinson's patients experience cognitive decline, memory loss, and mental impairment that mimics but is not senile dementia.
Alzheimer's disease is a degenerative disease characterized by memory loss. Although Parkinson's disease and senile dementia are common in the elderly, they are not a disease and should be diagnosed in the hospital and carried out accordingly, and the drugs are not the same.
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Parkinson's is not Alzheimer's.
Parkinson's disease mainly affects the locomotor system of the elderly, Parkinson's disease is a degenerative disease of the nervous system, not Alzheimer's, which is affected by a variety of factors, such as environmental factors, genetic factors, aging of the nervous system, etc., as well as the result of the interaction of multiple factors. The main clinical manifestations are tremor, stiffness, unsteady walking, and motor system, and intelligence is completely normal, but there will be changes in the later stage of intellectual development.
In the early stage, it is mainly due to the change of movement, while Alzheimer's disease mainly destroys the intellectual system of the elderly, and cognition and memory are obvious regressions, but the movements and movements still involve abilities and do not cause major changes, so the two diseases are essentially different.
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Parkinson's disease is not senile dementia, both belong to the degenerative diseases of the central nervous system, the differences are as follows, one, Parkinson's disease, the degeneration and necrosis of dopamine neurons in the substantia nigrastriatum leads to the decline of dopamine function, some, strong, clinical manifestations, movement, symptoms, such as, slowness of movement, tremor of the limbs, increased muscle tone, language disorders, dysphagia, etc., dementia will also occur in the later stage of Parkinson's disease, memory loss and slow response, etc., second, Alzheimer's disease, mainly, It is mainly a disease of memory impairment and all-round cognitive decline.
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Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease are two different diseases. Alzheimer's disease is a disease in which the frontotemporal lobe atrophy caused by aging causes memory impairment and mental decline.
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Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease are two different diseases, Alzheimer's disease is also known as Alzheimer's disease in medicine, and it is also a disease caused by the atrophy and degeneration of the nerve function of the elderly, especially the cortical hippocampus. I just mentioned that Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease are two different diseases, but they are more likely to occur in the elderly, and at the same time, Parkinson's disease will also have cognitive decline in the middle and late stages, including memory loss, and some serious mental symptoms, which are indeed similar to Alzheimer's disease, Alzheimer's disease will gradually become obvious with age, and there is no specific method at present. Then the proportion of Parkinson's disease in the later stage of Alzheimer's disease is also quite high, and it has been reported that it is about 20% to 30%.
After the above understanding, we can see that Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease are two different diseases, and there are many effective methods for Parkinson's disease, while Alzheimer's disease (Alzheimer's disease) has many drugs, but there is no specific drug, and there is no surgical method. With the development of Parkinson's disease, some patients with Parkinson's disease do have the manifestations of dementia, there is a probability, not all of them, patients and their families should not worry too much, follow the instructions to take medicine, adjust their mentality, insist on exercise, and fight the disease.
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Analysis: Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease are two different diseases. Parkinson's disease is mainly an extrapyramidal disease caused by the loss of dopamine in the substantia nigra striatum in the skull, which is mainly caused by increased muscle tone, slowness of movement, and abnormal gait.
Alzheimer's disease is a disease in which patients suffer from memory impairment and mental decline due to the atrophy of the frontotemporal lobes caused by aging, but patients with advanced Parkinson's disease can also have symptoms of dementia.
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Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease are not one disease. We usually refer to Alzheimer's disease. It's Alzheimer's disease. So not Parkinson's.
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These are two completely different diseases, and Parkinson's is certainly not Alzheimer's. Parkinson's disease is an extrapyramidal disease, and it is also a typical movement disorder, which mainly affects the patient's motor function, such as very slow movement, stiffness of muscles throughout the body, and some abnormal posture and gait clinical manifestations.
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Parkinson's disease is not Alzheimer's disease. Because Parkinson's disease and dementia are more common in the elderly, both are degenerative diseases, and Parkinson's disease patients in addition to the main motor symptoms are motor retardation, some patients will also show slow thinking, especially in the middle and late stages of the disease, many patients will be combined with cognitive dysfunction, and eventually develop dementia, called Parkinson's disease dementia, and some patients will be combined with mental behavior abnormalities. Therefore, Parkinson's disease is not the same as Alzheimer's disease, but Parkinson's disease may be combined with dementia and even develop dementia.
Therefore, for Parkinson's patients, it is advisable for patients to visit the doctor regularly for cognitive screening, and timely intervention when early cognitive function changes occur, which can improve the quality of life and survival of Parkinson's disease patients and reduce the burden on caregivers.
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Parkinson's and Alzheimer's disease have some similarities in terms of symptoms, so presumably this is a problem that everyone is very concerned about and concerned about, so in response to everyone's questions, today we will give you a brief introduction, and then you will listen to the introduction!
1. Parkinson's disease is different from Alzheimer's.
The main cause of Parkinson's disease is the degeneration of the substantia nigra in the brain. The substantia nigra secretes dopamine, and when the substantia nigra degenerates, the amount of dopamine secreted is insufficient. If the dopamine level falls below 50% of the normal amount, symptoms of Parkinson's (paralysis tremens) will begin to appear.
The site of Alzheimer's disease is also in the brain, but it is in the Nie lobe of the brain. If the Nie lobe atrophies, symptoms of Alzheimer's disease (Alzheimer's disease) appear.
2. Distinguish the difference between Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's symptoms.
Alzheimer's patients prefer to stay quietly most of the time and are reluctant to move; No obvious somatic symptoms; There is significant memory loss, especially the memory of recent events, and he always likes to forget things, but he may remember things very clearly when he was young; Sudden changes in personality, such as: becoming calculating, easily agitated, and easily sad; I don't want to stay in one place, but I often don't remember the way and it's easy to get lost.
3. Parkinson's and Alzheimer's disease from the perspective of the best effect.
Parkinson's (Treminson's Paralysis) DiseaseAt present, Parkinson's (Tremor Paralysis) disease can be treated with drugs, surgery, or a combination of superconducting radio frequency technology**. In terms of drugs, levodopa preparations are the main ** drugs, which are effective in relieving symptoms. In addition, neurosurgery can relieve Parkinson's disease (paralysis tremens).
Superconducting RF integrated technology is the first choice for Parkinson's patients, and different Parkinson's patients can find a suitable solution for themselves.
Although there are many drugs for Alzheimer's disease, there is no specific drug, and there is no way to operate.
Hello, yes.
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Parkinson's disease is a neurodegenerative disease that is common in middle-aged and elderly people, so the common age of onset of Parkinson's disease is after the age of 60, and it is relatively rare before the age of 40, with an average age of onset of about 55 years old. In China, the prevalence of 65-year-old people is higher, and with the increase of age, the prevalence will gradually increase, and the prevalence is slightly higher in men than in women. The pathology and pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease are not fully understood, but Parkinson's disease is closely related to some related factors, such as genetic factors, environmental factors, and nervous system aging. >>>More
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