DOI: 10.37421/2167-1222.2022.11.532
DOI: 10.37421/2167-1222.2022.11.533
Anny Anderson* and Seamy Grace
DOI: 10.37421/2167-1222.2022.11.534
Alzheimer's disease is a neurological condition that worsens over time despite having a slow progression. It is believed to be the root of 60-70% of cases of dementia. The most typical initial sign is trouble remembering recent events. Language problems, disorientation (including getting lost easily), mood swings, loss of desire, self-neglect, and behavioral disorders are all potential signs of illness progression. When a person's health starts to deteriorate, they frequently isolate themselves from friends and relatives. Over time, the body's abilities decline, ultimately resulting in death. Despite the fact that the rate of advancement varies, the typical life expectancy after diagnosis is three to nine years.
DOI: 10.37421/2167-1222.2022.11.535
Seamy Grace* and Drake D. Marison
DOI: 10.37421/2167-1222.2022.11.536
Intestinal function and dysfunction is a mysterious response linked to emotion, embarrassment, and shame. Perception of GI symptoms was assumed to be of different cause in every population. For example, a group of people considered it as hallucinations, whereas another group of people with lower socioeconomic status did not recognize GI clinical features as symptoms. However, modern studies suggest that diet, depression, stress, or anxiety can mutually trigger GI symptoms justified by the physiological, behavioral and psychosocial investigation of functional GI disorder (FGID). Other studies using emotion as stress on healthy subjects and subjects with IBS patients suggest that mood correlates with intestinal motility. For example, the increase and decrease in the intestinal motility were found to be associated with states of aggression and feeling of helplessness respectively. These studies, however, were limited by rudimentary measuring methods and unidirectional analysis approach.
Journal of Trauma & Treatment received 1048 citations as per Google Scholar report