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Dementia is a disease in which memory becomes weak. The disease is caused by a lack of acetylcholine, a brain chemical that plays an important role in memory. A lack of this chemical can lead to behavioral changes and memory loss.
Dementia affects people from all walks of life, both men and women. Approximately 700,000 people in Pakistan suffer from the disease. Dementia has many causes. For example, vitamin B12 deficiency. People who eat more vegetables.
This disease is common among them. In addition, hypothyroidism and meningioma

these causes, if treated, can cure a patient’s memory loss. In addition, drinking alcohol and taking excessive sleeping pills can also lead to dementia. Head injury from any cause is also a cause of this disorder.
The leading cause of dementia is Alzheimer’s disease, which causes brain cell death. This is common in Western countries, and we have more “vascular dementia” – weakened blood vessels in the brain, because we have diabetes and high blood pressure.
NPH (Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus) is a condition related to this, which means that the blood vessels in the brain fill up with more than a normal amount of water, and the pressure in the brain increases. The patient was amnesic, had difficulty walking, and had uncontrollable urination. This is also a sign of memory loss and can be treated.
Memory loss in dementia begins when the person forgets small things. For example, forgetting the names of family members, leaving anything somewhere, forgetting the way home, the way to the mosque, forgetting to pray etc. He will remember all the old things, such as the 1965 War and the 1992 World Cup, but he will forget the new things. The disease also affects the communication part of the brain. For example, difficulty explaining yourself, difficulty understanding what others are saying, and repeating the same things over and over again.
The disease also affects the part of the brain responsible for recognizing everyday objects. For example, if you look at the key, the key cannot speak; if you look at the cell phone, the cell phone cannot speak. In this disease, the patient’s own daily activities are affected. For example, changing clothes, eating, getting a haircut, and shaving. All of these will be affected.
As the disease progresses, some psychological problems

develop in patients. For example, hallucinations mean he starts seeing things that people in the room can’t. Auditory hallucinations are hearing voices in the ears. Together with delusions, the patient becomes suspicious of others. When experiencing these types of symptoms, patients may become anxious and depressed, avoid being in front of people, and isolate themselves.
These types of patients should be managed with great caution. In particular, such patients should not be allowed to leave their homes. Even when they step out of the house, they should have a card or band tied around their neck or hand.
It should indicate your home address and mobile phone number. Communicate with the patient, sit in the sun early in the morning, take anti-diabetic and anti-hypertensive medicines regularly, apart from this, taking kalonji and honey before breakfast every day can be very beneficial to the patient.

The disease can be controlled through the use of some medications, etc., but it cannot be completely eradicated. In addition, a 30-minute walk every day, daily interaction between the family and the patient, and taking care of the patient’s cleanliness are also very important.
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