:30 "Keys" Know the 10 Signs - Early Detection Matters

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Uploaded by on May 18, 2009

Television commercial for our Early Detection campaign, "Know the 10 Signs." http://www.alz.org/10signs

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Nonprofits & Activism

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  • So what's the point of knowing the symptoms of alzheimer's if there's no cure? To make the victim stressed?

  • I just did this last week with my phone...

    And I'm 14...

    I was just getting milk and my hands were full and the phone was in my hand! *.*

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  • @SuperHer0Fan that would be stress

  • @terminator847 There is medication to slow the progress of the disease. Its hard to know that they aren't going to recover but buying them time for a year or two means they and their relatives have the chance to say goodbyes before the more devastating phases come in.

  • Just recently my husband has gotten confused weather its day or night. This has happened 3 times in just 1 month. The first time it happened i thought he was kidding cause he's like that, but then i realized he was serious. The second time it happen'd i became concerned, and yesterday at 2:45 PM he comes in and ask me and my daughter why we were up so early, i told him to look outside that it was day time. I don't believe its a coincidence anymore. Just wondering.

  • you know what sucks! that i always leave the keys in the most oddest of places too

  • Its not nice at all, I hope we find a cure

  • Well, I stand corrected. :-)

    My best guess is that words can change their pronunciation country-to-country, and "ahls-heimers" is the Americanization of the name. Like how someone in America can say they drive a Hyundai ("Hun-day") and in Korea they drive a "Hee-un-day", and in Australia it's a "Hi-un-die".

  • No it's not (although it would've probably been better to have said "Alts-himers") - it was named after the German scientist Alois Alzheimer - where, in German, the Z represents a voiceless alveolar plosive followed by a voiceless alveolar fricative, as opposed to the voiced alveolar fricative that it normally represents in English. And I have no idea how an A, normally an open front unrounded vowel, becomes open-mid back and rounded.

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