Alzheimer’s Disease is the most common cause of dementia. While Alzheimer’s is a specific disease; dementia is not.
In 2021, we celebrate the 10th year of World Alzheimer’s Month, with the objective of creating awareness for this debilitating disease, and September 21 being World Alzheimer’s Day, we want to highlight the differences between Alzheimer’s and Dementia. Learning about the differences between them is important and can empower individuals, living with Alzheimer’s or another dementia, their families and their caregivers with necessary knowledge to understand and cope with sufferers of this disease.
Alzheimer’s is a specific brain disease that accounts for 60-80% of dementia cases. Dementia is a general term for symptoms mentioned above.
Though the greatest known risk factor for Alzheimer’s is increasing age, the disease is not a normal part of aging. And though most people with Alzheimer’s are 65 and older, approximately 200,000 Americans under 65 are living with younger-onset Alzheimer’s disease.
How does one recognize family members or friends dealing with dementia? Dementia warning signs include:
• memory loss
• difficulty performing familiar tasks
• problems with language
• disorientation
• poor or diminished judgment
• misplacing things
• mood or behavior change
• trouble with images and spatial relationships
• social withdrawal at work or with peers/family
Memorie is a collection of mobile games developed by neuroscientists and psychologists to provide the most relevant training methods for cognitive development. This helps train the different cognitive functions of our brains. These fun and engaging mental exercises seek to enhance cognitive skills in attention, memory, decision-making, spatial awareness, and cognitive flexibility. This solution enables us to think faster, learn smarter, and remember better.
Paired with the Neeuro SenzeBand, the Memorie app is a collection of 15 engaging games that ensures an accurate way to track brain fitness in addition to Game scores, a ‘Brain’ score, a metric that measures your brain activity while training, will also be provided at the end of each game level.
Regular and monitored training of these cognitive skills will help in your mental fitness. Mental fitness is empowering, as we set ourselves, or our loved ones, on the road to a stronger and healthier brain.
Learn more about EEG brain training solutions to help manage dementia and other cognitive issues.