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UC Davis Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center
United States
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 25 ต.ค. 2017
The mission of the UC Davis Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center is to advance the understanding of Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias through comprehensive patient evaluations and cutting edge research.
Our lecture videos presented by UC Davis faculty and nationally prominent researchers with expertise in the field of Alzheimer’s disease throughout the year. The talks are designed for lay audiences and are open to the public. They are held at the UC Davis Medical Center.
Our lecture videos presented by UC Davis faculty and nationally prominent researchers with expertise in the field of Alzheimer’s disease throughout the year. The talks are designed for lay audiences and are open to the public. They are held at the UC Davis Medical Center.
Session 2 Caregiver Stress and Stress Managment
Dr. Alyssa Weakley, a neuropsychologist at the UC Davis Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center, addresses topics such as caregiver stress and burnout and provides insight into the sources of stress in caregiving and suggestions for managing them.
มุมมอง: 229
วีดีโอ
Session 4 Personality Changes and Communication
มุมมอง 1683 ปีที่แล้ว
In this presentation, Dr. Oanh Meyer, a social psychologist with the UC Davis Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center, provides caregivers with an understanding of the relationship between changes in behavior and communication in those with memory loss and how caregivers can navigate these changes.
Session 1 Learning More About Alzheimer's and Related Dementias1
มุมมอง 3993 ปีที่แล้ว
In this presentation, Dr. Sarah Farias, a neuropsychologist with the UC Davis Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center, gives an overview of the forms of dementia, the signs and symptoms, and how it is diagnosed and treated.
The Impending Dementia Epidemic: Can It Be Prevented?
มุมมอง 3.7K4 ปีที่แล้ว
Dr. Deborah Barnes, PhD, MPH is a Professor of Psychiatry and Epidemiology and Biostatistics at the University of California, San Francisco and a Research Health Science Specialist at the San Francisco VA. Her research focuses on identifying modifiable risk factors for cognitive impairment and dementia; developing prediction models to identify high-risk people and predict the impact of risk red...
Caregiver Workshop Panelist Answers to Your Questions
มุมมอง 3365 ปีที่แล้ว
The panel of speakers and local professionals, moderated by Dr. Carolina Apesoa-Varano, answers audience questions and provides helpful resources. Panel members include: Linda Teri, PhD, Kathryn Sexson, PhD, Huey Lin, MD, and Esther Lara, MSW.
The Teamwork Care Approach of a Loved One with Dementia
มุมมอง 3155 ปีที่แล้ว
Dr. Huey Lin discusses how a collaborative teamwork approach is vital in providing excellent care to a loved one with dementia. There are numerous individual and systemic challenges and barriers preventing a care team from effectively working together. Through personal stories Dr. Lin identifies, from a primary care perspective, some of these challenges and barriers and some observations and th...
Navigating the challenges of dementia behaviors: When is it time to consider placement?
มุมมอง 5175 ปีที่แล้ว
Dr. Kathryn Sexson speaks about navigating the challenges of dementia behavior management when is it time to consider placement.
When Caring is Not Enough: Combining Science with Compassion
มุมมอง 2685 ปีที่แล้ว
Dr. Linda Teri provides an overview of issues in providing optimal care for persons with dementia and their caregivers. It provides specific techniques that have been shown most effective to alleviate behavioral problems and introduces the audience to a novel state of the science intervention that combines our best clinical and research knowledge to alleviate behavioral problems while also targ...
Perspectives from the Alzheimer’s Association: Updates in Alzheimer’s Dementia Research
มุมมอง 2.5K5 ปีที่แล้ว
This presentation, by Maria Carrillo, PhD, discusses recent findings in Alzheimer's research addressing the current focus of lifestyle modifications on Alzheimer's disease prevention and provide steps to promote healthy brain aging.
Dental Health As We Age
มุมมอง 2.5K5 ปีที่แล้ว
This presentation, by Dr. William Love, provides a brief review of dental and oral anatomy, the tooth and gum disease process and strategies for prevention. He also emphasizes how the aging process impacts oral health care.
UC Davis Horse Therapy
มุมมอง 1165 ปีที่แล้ว
Full story: ucdavis.health/horses UC Davis is partnering with the nonprofit organization Connected Horse to study how equine-guided activities could benefit people with dementia and their caregivers. UC Davis Alzheimer's Disease Center: health.ucdavis.edu/alzheimers/ Connected Horse: www.connectedhorse.com/ See the latest news from UC Davis Health: health.ucdavis.edu/newsroom
Alzheimer’s in the African-American Community - UC Davis Alzheimer’s Disease Center East Bay
มุมมอง 8336 ปีที่แล้ว
Description: Did you know that African Americans are two times more likely to develop Alzheimer's disease? One of the main reasons Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is known as the silent epidemic in the African-American community is because few African Americans have historically participated in Alzheimer's research. As a result, little is known about why the illness affects blacks twice as often as wh...
Fran LaDay's Alzheimer's Journey - UC Davis Alzheimer’s Disease Center East Bay
มุมมอง 1206 ปีที่แล้ว
East Bay UC Davis Alzheimer’s Disease Center patient Fran LaDay shares her personal Alzheimer’s Disease journey and why she participates in the African-American research study. The UC Davis Alzheimer’s Disease Center East Bay is a unique research and medical training facility focused on understanding how cognitive problems eventually develop into Alzheimer’s disease. We are one of the world’s c...
Marva Canada's Alzheimer's Journey - UC Davis Alzheimer’s Disease Center East Bay
มุมมอง 2406 ปีที่แล้ว
East Bay UC Davis Alzheimer’s Disease Center patient Marva Canada shares her personal Alzheimer’s Disease journey and why she participates in the African-American research study. The UC Davis Alzheimer’s Disease Center East Bay is a unique research and medical training facility focused on understanding how cognitive problems eventually develop into Alzheimer’s disease. We are one of the world’s...
Maude Green's Alzheimer's Journey - UC Davis Alzheimer’s Disease Center East Bay
มุมมอง 2626 ปีที่แล้ว
Maude Green's Alzheimer's Journey - UC Davis Alzheimer’s Disease Center East Bay
Exercise in the Fight Against Alzheimer's
มุมมอง 10K7 ปีที่แล้ว
Exercise in the Fight Against Alzheimer's
Behavioral Contributions to Cognitive Health in Old Age
มุมมอง 2.3K7 ปีที่แล้ว
Behavioral Contributions to Cognitive Health in Old Age
New Alternative Medicine Approaches to Brain Health
มุมมอง 2.3K7 ปีที่แล้ว
New Alternative Medicine Approaches to Brain Health
Can Vitamins Prevent Age-Related Cognitive Decline?
มุมมอง 29K7 ปีที่แล้ว
Can Vitamins Prevent Age-Related Cognitive Decline?
Fascinating!
Dr Berg , Thank you, Your 6 years old video , but I love it, God Bless
I’m wondering about lead exposure, where would this fit in? Enjoyed the video and found it very interesting. Thank you.
Please see this piece published in the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease: www.j-alz.com/content/there-link-between-lifetime-lead-exposure-and-dementia#:~:text=Animal%20studies%20and%20research%20on%20individuals%20occupationally%20exposed,with%20a%20greater%20exposure%20to%20traffic%20related%20pollution.
Wow!👍 Just came across this video. Powerful info & wonderful presentation!!! I am sharing this as far & wide as I can. Also with my GP. Tks!👍
This video is refreshingly based on solid evidence. The speaker has an engaging style and clearly possesses a deep breadth of nutritional knowledge relating to the development of this devastating degenerative disease.
Very insightful and tremendous work being done!!! Thank you!!!
Brilliant presentation! Loved it!
Omega 3’s!
Omega 3 with b12
Re: the "Blue Zones", I understand the focus of this talk is nutrition but one shouldn't have the idea that nutrition is the only, or even the principal, factor involved in the blue zones. In fact the lifestyle is characterized by a significant amount of physical activity; many of these people are farmers, vegetable gardeners etc., and also by social interconnectivity, living in multi generational families and villages that function as tribes. This psychosocial connection is very important for health and longevity as well.
I agree but none of that can overcome poor Metabolic health. When these people were all tested across all the Blue Zones- the common denominator was High Insulin Sensitivity and Low Fasting Insulin which Exercise and low stress can augment but Diet is one of the main factors
Along with either acquired due to diet and sunshine - or genetically good insulin function -The other common denominator was sunshine - and Vitamin D access- which I'm not even sure they tested... but they are all in the Latitudes with year round sun and some also have the added advantage of altitude
As a retired biochemist (84), I have been taking the vitamin group for 20 yrs. Just did a IQ test, mathematical and Pattern recognition, and scored 119. I'm still trading stocks and shares and creating Excel spreadsheets.
If you are trading stocks and shares you must have something wrong with your brain. Buy the index with a low cost ETF and forget about trading.
There is no fun in index trading, boring too. I like charts, trends, momentum etc. Picking an index is when you go into an old people’s home.
Should have kept the camera on the slides.
I’m sure this Dr. thought she had things figured out at the time, but I would suggest whoever listens to this talk verify every talking point in relation to their explicit circumstances. Many things, especially eating beans, are not necessarily a healthy alternative for protein as well as being very carbohydrate heavy and inflammatory, despite fiber. In other words, “Beware of old and outdated content.”
Excellent!! I'm a big believer in vitamins!!! Basics are very important for wellbeing 😊
Dr.Gundry won’t agree to your concepts
coconut oil ...1 x tablespoon a day
I'm writing a graphic memoir of how I used my health and fitness knowledge to stop my mother with mild dementia from forgetting me, and it worked. I tricked her off caffeine, then no prescription meds, forced her/tricked her/incentivized her to drink water, kept her away from high fructose corn syrup and other poison, because they made her mean and delusional, and kept her away from gluten. Funny thing is decades ago Dr. Oz said Zocor was causing memory loss and then my mother parroted that to everyone, but later on when she said it to a nurse practitioner during his assessment of a MMSE, he said she was delusional for saying that and this nursing home that I had to fight in probate court for 2 months to get my mother out, used it as a way to imprison her in a lockdown unit.
Horror story you have there. So upsetting they did that to you and your precious mother.
Eating fatty meat is the key, not plants.
Ad marijuana to the list. Except for nicotine, maybe of the toxins are the same as cigarettes, lead, cadmium, etc.
Wow, this is entirely "USDA food pyramid" thinking, no thanks
Well you had me until you launched your discussion on cholesterol. I know 4 cardiologists who will tell you that people react differently to foods with regard to cholesterol. I have high cholesterol numbers and take Crestor. And I had bad Triglyceride numbers, HDL numbers, LDL numbers, and cholesterol numbers when I weighed 165 and ate much better than I do now. However I know people who are obese and morbidly obese who eat vast amounts of fatty foods including beef, pork, cakes, donuts; you name it, and they have good numbers through the range. My doctors could not explain this obviously you can't either. But to put blanket statements and claims on here about cholesterol is simply wrong.
LOL, I eat ton of fats, hardly any veggies at all, and Ive lost 50+ pounds and almost cured my ME/CFS and fibro. Listen to Dr Paul Mason about cholesterol, its a fake bogeyman, they invented a problem.
Thumbs up!
Dr.miller
AAaaaaaaaaa Tqc
This is complete bull, my grand father eat meat nearly every day until he was 95 and I remember I discussed architecture topics one day before he died, so he had zero dementia, asking people to give up meat is not productive and completely unrealistic for the vast majority of people
People have different genetics, I can't do the things my husband does.
This presentation material and the facts that are being canvased are out of date must be removed from TH-cam and internet. The ketogenic diet impact on Alzheimer's conic condition are well known. The ketogenic diet has far less carbs and is rich in fat and protein. Even to question why fatty meat has a glycemic index is so totally ridiculous and shows lack of knowledge on how the insulin system works. There is no mention about insulin resistance and the ensuing problem and degeneration and damage to mitochondria are not discussed. I would suggest this presentation be removed as it spreads misinformation
At minute 28 I stopped watching this video: too much half truths. I think the carb industry is behind this video. Look up Nina Teicholz in YT.
Minute 27: the American Heart disease organisation. Look up its history: funded by the sugar/carb industry.
80 % of people with Alzheimer also have Diabetes 2! From minute 17 she talks more and more about unproven claims!
Minute 25: Meat causes AH. What about the Massai in Africa: about 80% Meat and no Alzheimer!
Is the center sponsored by the carb industry? Watch this video on yt: th-cam.com/video/da1vvigy5tQ/w-d-xo.html
At 24 minutes she really says: fat is the cause of diabetes 2! Does she know that she is lying? Watch this video: th-cam.com/video/da1vvigy5tQ/w-d-xo.html
Minute 21: insulin index. about 60-70 % of the calories intake in the USA are carb!
At minute 17: fat The researcher who say Highcarb is the cause of Alzheimer also they that fat from seeds like cotton oil, sunflower oil, rape oil etc. and margarine and all processed food (bread also!) cause Alzheimer. In America about 75% of all fat intake is from these sources! All grains who have a very bad ratio Omega 6 : Omega 3 are bad.
Very very interested 👌
Question about Greek yoghurt: if it has such a high insulin index, shouldn't it cause a glucose spike? Asking as I have a lot of Greek yoghurt each morning, and I monitor my blood glucose, so I know that the yoghurt (or the apple and nuts I eat with it) has virtually no impact on my blood glucose.
Worth noting that research suggests that very low meat consumption increases the long term risk of dementia. As someone who doesn't eat meat and really doesn't want to start eating it, that's a big concern. Especially as my elderly mother was mostly vegetarian for decades, and developed dementia in her 70s. Food for thought indeed!
I eat meat every day and will continue to eat every day, we will die regardless of what we do
My Mom died of Alzheimer’s and ate red meat every single day.
Leaky gut, leaky brain. Or rather leaky blood brain barrier. Gotta eat lots of particular types of berries. Gotta watch for those free radicals, or those lipopolysaccharides (LPS). A stomach needs a lot of food that contains butyrate as well.
It's NOT the low "meat" per se but the addition of high carbs they takes their place.
My husband’s Alzheimer’s disease was completely reversed with the help of Solution Healing Home channel on TH-cam th-cam.com/users/shortsh0YncUMye4c?feature=share
This is a typical Alzheimer’s researcher. He doesn’t study Alzheimer’s, he studies amyloid. All amyloid all the time. Unfortunately amyloid is bs. Insurance companies are right not to pay for it.
Before I watch this can you explain to me amyloid is..as well as why companies on't pay for it? Thanks
Boring
It wasn't easy but it did works in curing my human papillomavirus, all thanks to Dr Madida for sending me the herbal cure.
Stop spraying aluminum on the clouds.
The Japanese walk 12 miles a day on average. Fruit is sugar - and sugar causes liver damage. What a nutjob. Most people in Africa walk a lot too.
Death is a natural symptom of aging.
Where does this leave Dr Berg,s ketogenic diet?
Wrong: It is caused by seed oils.
th-cam.com/video/q5ljYB0WI5g/w-d-xo.html
Very interesting
Update for 2022?
She ain’t got a clue !!!!
how can you have any pudding if you don't eat your meat .....//.... we don't need no education,. we don't need no thoughts control ..... .....
Oh, drugs, drugs and more drugs. They don't work! This might & it doesn't poison you in the process. I have been working in care field for 20 years. Look into dr Dale Bredesen's work.th-cam.com/video/eAbdQnCb9cc/w-d-xo.html