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Type of Dementia - Huntington's Disease

The information on this page is for reference and educational purposes. There is no substitute for seeing a doctor.
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The National Institutes of Health
defines Huntington's disease (HD) as resulting from genetically programmed degeneration of brain cells, called neurons, in certain areas of the brain. This degeneration causes uncontrolled movements, loss of intellectual faculties, and emotional disturbance. HD is a familial disease, passed from parent to child through a mutation in the normal gene. Each child of an HD parent has a 50-50 chance of inheriting the HD gene. If a child does not inherit the HD gene, he or she will not develop the disease and cannot pass it to subsequent generations. A person who inherits the HD gene will sooner or later develop the disease. Whether one child inherits the gene has no bearing on whether others will or will not inherit the gene. Some early symptoms of HD are mood swings, depression, irritability or trouble driving, learning new things, remembering a fact, or making a decision. As the disease progresses, concentration on intellectual tasks becomes increasingly difficult and the patient may have difficulty feeding himself or herself and swallowing. The rate of disease progression and the age of onset vary from person to person. A genetic test, a complete medical history, and neurological and laboratory tests, help physician's diagnose HD. Presymptomic testing is available for individuals who are at risk for carrying the HD gene. In 1 to 3 percent of individuals with HD, no family history of HD can be found.

Best FTD Resources



What If It's Not Alzheimer's
© 2003 by Lisa Radin and Gary Radin

Chapter 1
Pages 23-25

Association of Frontotemporal Dementia (Website)

No information was found on this website about this topic.

Pick's Disease Support Group (Website)

No information was found on this website about this topic.

University of California, San Francisco (Website)
Family Caregiver Alliance (Website)
National Institutes of Health (Website)

 

Other Internet Articles



Huntington's Disease Advocacy Center

www.hdac.org/home.php

From Sacramento County Network of Care.

http://sacramento.networkofcare.org/aging/library/hwdetail.cfm?hwid=nord18&cat=2

Alzheimer Europe offers this web page about
"Huntington's Disease "

http://www.alzheimer-europe.org/?lm3=A791024DC5A1
+11/14/06



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