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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
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1990
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91
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apr_jun
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0415510.000
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<text>
<title>
(Apr. 15, 1991) Interview:Jacob Fox
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Apr. 15, 1991 Saddam's Latest Victims
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
INTERVIEW, Page 10
Broken Connections, Missing Memories
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Chicago neurologist JACOB FOX sifts through the intricacies of
the brain to separate the symptoms of Alzheimer's disease from
spells of ordinary forgetfulness
</p>
<p>By J. Madeleine Nash/Chicago
</p>
<p> Q. Many older people, noticing they have trouble
remembering things, are petrified that they may be developing
Alzheimer's. Are their fears warranted?
</p>
<p> A. One of about every 20 patients I see at
Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center could be described
as an Alzheimer's-phobic. My rule of thumb is that the person
who thinks he or she has Alzheimer's doesn't. Almost invariably,
the Alzheimer's patient is brought in by a family member. Either
the patient is not aware of the problem or just can't get it
together to make an appointment with a doctor.
</p>
<p> Q. But why do so many older people seem to have trouble
with memory lapses?
</p>
<p> A. There's something known as age-associated memory
impairment. It sometimes takes the form of absentmindedness,
like misplacing things. The typical story is, you come into the
house, you put your briefcase down, and you're distracted by
something. Maybe the kids are having a fight. So you go break
up the fight, and then you can't remember where you put your
briefcase. Another common difficulty is thinking of names,
particularly proper names. I myself have always had difficulty
with names, and I've always been slightly absentminded. So when
a person comes in with complaints about memory, I can say with
a great deal of honesty that we both have the same problem, only
I have it worse.
</p>
<p> Q. Have you ever tried to train yourself to have a better
memory?
</p>
<p> A. Most memory tricks have to do with connecting words to
visual images. When I've tried it, I couldn't remember the
visual image I was supposed to recall!
</p>
<p> Q. What is usually the first symptom of Alzheimer's
disease?
</p>
<p> A. The typical patient starts with memory problems and
then deteriorates into more general confusion. A truck driver
may keep delivering things to the wrong place, or a bookkeeper
may not be keeping the books right anymore. Motor skills are
usually retained longer, although certain patients will have
difficulty early on with tasks like using a screwdriver or tying
shoelaces.
</p>
<p> Q. Why is memory the first to go?
</p>
<p> A. In Alzheimer's disease one of the most profoundly
affected areas of the brain is the hippocampus. Memories may not
actually be stored in the hippocampus. Instead the area may act
as a retrieval mechanism for reaching those memories.
</p>
<p> Q. Why then do Alzheimer's patients often retain vivid
memories of childhood events?
</p>
<p> A. There is reason to believe that recently learned
information is not dealt with in the same way as information
learned a long time ago. So, even though the hippocampus may be
involved in learning something initially, as time goes on, that
information may be stored or processed in other areas of the
brain. This may, in fact, be the explanation for why Alzheimer's
patients initially have problems learning and remembering new
things, but are better at remembering old things.
</p>
<p> Q. What exactly does Alzheimer's disease do to the brain?
</p>
<p> A. People argue about this. There are billions and
billions of cells that make up the brain, like the bricks that
make up a house, and for years it was thought that Alzheimer's
disease was caused by a loss of these cells. Some recent studies
suggest, however, that what is important may not be a loss of
cells so much as a shrinkage. Each brain cell has a central
body, attached to which are the axons and dendrites. The
simplest way to think about it is that the dendrite is the part
of the cell that receives information, and the axon is the part
that sends information out. Maybe it's these axons and dendrites
that shrink.
</p>
<p> Q. The axons and dendrites connect one brain cell to
another. Is this why they are central to memory?
</p>
<p> A. When you learn something and retain it, something must
change in the brain. Most people now believe that what happens
is that certain connections between brain cells and groups of
brain cells become enhanced. So it's reasonable to believe that
in an illness like Alzheimer's these connections may be the
first things to be disrupted.
</p>
<p> Q. What distinguishes an Alzheimer's brain from a normal
brain?
</p>
<p> A. There are two pathological hallmarks of Alzheimer's:
plaques and tangles. A plaque appears to be a conglomeration of
deteriorating nerve-cell terminals. A tangle, on the other hand,
is a conglomeration of deteriorating neurofilaments, little
tubes that traverse the central body of the brain cell.
Sometimes the cell dies, and all that's left is the tangle. The
question is, Which abnormality is key?
</p>
<p> Perhaps the answer is neither. If you just looked at heart
tissue after a heart attack, you would see scarring. You
wouldn't realize that what caused the heart attack was the fact
that a blood vessel got blocked. So in Alzheimer's disease maybe
we are seeing only the second or third or fourth steps; maybe
we have yet to locate where the real action is. In other words,
the plaques and tangles may just be the graves of brain cells
and may not speak to what caused their deaths.
</p>
<p> Q. Do you have any favorite theory about what causes
Alzheimer's?
</p>
<p> A. I can honestly say that when it comes to the cause of
Alzheimer's, I'm an agnostic. I'm waiting to find out. One
theory is that if we all lived to 120, we'd all get Alzheimer's
disease. I think if you told people they would get Alzheimer's
when they were 120 years old, they wouldn't be terribly upset.
The real question, then, is, Why do some people get Alzheimer's
at age 50, 60, 70, 80?
</p>
<p> Q. Is Alzheimer's disease really as frighteningly common
as it appears?
</p>
<p> A. A diagnosis of Alzheimer's used to be reserved for
younger people who became prematurely senile. Senility in older
people was believed to be due to something else, like hardening
of the arteries. But now we know that the difference between
senile old people and normal old people is that one group
generally has Alzheimer's and the other doesn't. We also know
that Alzheimer's becomes more common as people grow older, and
since the population of this country is aging, we are seeing
more patients with Alzheimer's. A colleague of mine estimates
that 10% of people over 65 have Alzheimer's, and past the age
of 85 the number may approach 50%. So sometime in the next
century, when we have 80 million people in this country above
the age of 65, we might have 8 million Alzheimer's patients.
</p>
<p> Q. Last year a woman diagnosed with Alzheimer's killed
herself with the help of a "suicide machine." What was your
reaction?
</p>
<p> A. That incident was unfortunate because it focused
attention on death in mildly affected patients, whereas the
biggest problem for those of us who care for Alzheimer's
patients is the prolongation of life in advanced stages of
disease. The question for us is, When patients inevitably lose
the ability to swallow, should we advise their families to put
in a stomach tube to feed them? My own personal advice is that
they shouldn't. If these patients could come out of their state
for a moment, knowing they would return to a state of absolutely
no comprehension and no hope, would they want to be kept alive?
Would I want to be kept alive like that? It's not being kept
alive as a human being, but as a shell, and that seems
inappropriate to me. The truth is, the person is gone and
doesn't really care.
</p>
<p> Q. What's hardest for families who are trying to cope with
an Alzheimer's patient?
</p>
<p> A. The realization that the person is different. For all
of us, our definition of personhood to some extent involves
thinking and understanding. I'm not saying that the person with
Alzheimer's is no longer a human being. But it's not like losing
a leg. When you lose a leg you're still the same person you were
before. Here, as the brain fails, the person becomes like a
shadow, like a reflection in the pool that is very, very blurry.
</p>
<p> Q. What advice do you have for families struggling with an
Alzheimer's patient?
</p>
<p> A. People frequently use their children as a model for
dealing with an Alzheimer's patient. But to treat patients as
you would a child, to try to teach them and train them, is
absolutely counterproductive. I tell families not to be bothered
by what the Alzheimer's patient does if it's just a bother in
theory. The best example of this is the patient who paces or
talks to the television set, or who does a task over and over
again. Maybe they'll keep folding or unfolding laundry, or maybe
they like to wash the same dish 20 or 30 times. Family members
tell me it's driving them crazy. My answer is, What are you
going to have this person do instead of folding and unfolding
laundry? Are they going to read Plato? Are they going to go to
a play by Shakespeare? What's the big deal?
</p>
<p> Q. Is there anything an early-stage Alzheimer's patient
should not be allowed to do?
</p>
<p> A. The one thing I'm adamant about is driving. We've done
a study where approximately a third of our patients, if we look
six months back, have either been involved in an accident or
have had a moving violation. So generally we advise that
Alzheimer's patients shouldn't drive. Sometimes, if this upsets
the patient, I tell the family, Put the car away and say it's
been stolen. Disconnect the battery and say the car is not
working. Steal the keys, if you have to.
</p>
<p> This is what I call creative lying, and again, the wrong
model is child rearing. If young children do things you don't
like, you don't lie to them about the reasons, because, after
all, you are trying to teach them the correct way to behave.
But an Alzheimer's patient is not learning anymore, and so the
issue for the family is not training or teaching, but surviving.
I don't see the harm in little white lies, or even
not-so-little white lies, if they maintain a certain degree of
peace in the family unit.
</p>
<p> Q. How hopeful are you that ways of treating Alzheimer's
disease will be found?
</p>
<p> A. Currently we have no proven treatment. I really don't
know, but I think that in the next few years we could begin to
have reasonable palliative treatments, meaning medicines that
improve the symptoms of the patients and make them function
better. But there's no good reason to believe that treating the
symptoms will prevent progression of the disease. If people are
in pain from cancer, they're clearly better off if you treat the
pain. But they still have the cancer.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>