Guide To Common Genetic Conditions
Alzheimer's Disease

Alzheimer's disease is the genetic condition that leads to the most deaths worldwide. Children often inherit it from their parents. However, it is not always hereditary. Environmental causes and brain trauma are believed to play a role in some individuals with this disorder. In inherited cases, mutations in any one of three different genes are believed to be the cause. This condition can occur at any age. However, it typically starts between thirty to sixty years old.
Memory problems are often one of the first symptoms. As areas of the brain degenerate and a patient's condition worsens, movement, speech, bodily functions, and cognitive processes can all be affected. At its worst, this condition can result in death. Two causes of death in Alzheimer's disease patients are aspiration pneumonia and pressure sores. Aspiration pneumonia can occur when patients who have trouble swallowing food inhale it instead, which causes pneumonia in the lungs. Pressure sores are skin sores caused by being immobile in bed too long. This sometimes leads to different types of infections, such as sepsis.
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