What is another word for Alzheimer's Disease?

Pronunciation: [ˈaltsa͡ɪməz dɪzˈiːz] (IPA)

Alzheimer's Disease is a degenerative brain disorder that affects memory, behavior, and cognition. There are several synonyms used to refer to this condition, each emphasizing different aspects of the disease. These synonyms include dementia, a term that encompasses a wide range of cognitive disorders; cognitive decline, highlighting the gradual loss of mental abilities; memory loss, referring to the most well-known symptom of Alzheimer's; and neurological disorder, highlighting the physical nature of the disease. Other synonyms include amnesia, aphasia, and apraxia, all of which describe specific cognitive impairments that may be caused by Alzheimer's. Despite the different labels used to describe this condition, it remains a challenging and devastating illness for all those who suffer from it.

Synonyms for Alzheimer's disease:

What are the hypernyms for Alzheimer's disease?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.
  • Other hypernyms:

    dementia, Organic Mental Disorder, Cerebral Neurocognitive Disorder, Senile Dementia of the Alzheimer’s Type, degenerative neurological disorder.

Famous quotes with Alzheimer's disease

  • Did you ever wonder why the Jews are such great proponents of democracy? Whether in Indonesia or Pakistan or Serbia or you name it, whenever there is some threat to universal suffrage, the Jews are ready to send the U.S. armed forces in to bomb and kill until everyone is permitted to vote. Why is that? Why can't the Indonesians have an Islamic theocracy if they want? Why can't the Pakistanis have a military dictatorship? Why can't the Serbs run their own country the way they prefer? What is the appeal in making sure that people whose minds have been wasted by Alzheimer's Disease vote? Well, let's not beat around the bush: the appeal of mass democracy lies in the fact that in essentially every country in the world today, the number of persons unable to think for themselves is substantially larger than the number able to make independent decisions. Those unable to think for themselves have their thinking done for them by the people who control the mass media. Which is to say, democracy is the preferred system because it gives the political power to those who own or control the mass media and at the same time allows them to remain behind the scenes and evade responsibility for the way in which they use that power. And the more inclusive the democracy is -- that is, the more Alzheimer's sufferers and Mongoloid cretinsand paranoid schizophrenics and people who live in empty packing cases in alley ways and Jamaican immigrants and football fans are able to vote -- the more certain is the grip of the media masters on the political process. Those voters who buy astrology magazines at the checkout stand and spend their time watching soap operas, game shows, and Oprah absorb their general attitudes on things through the television screen. They learn which ideas are fashionable and which are not by noticing the facial expression and tone of voice of Tom Brokaw and Dan Rather when the news is announced each day. Their opinions on specific issues are formed as they view televised sidewalk surveys taken by reporters. The only uncertainty about these people is whether or not they'll be able to pryt hemselves loose from their couches long enough to vote for the designated candidates. That's why it's important to have lots of them. And wherever there are lots of them, the men who control the mass media also will control the outcome of elections. It's a much surer way of controlling governments than bribing corrupt dictators or slipping seductive whores into the king's bedroom a la Esther and Ahasuerus -- or Monica and Bill. Believe me, one day soon the Jews on both sides of the great water will institute a web-TV voting system that allows the couch potatoes and the ball game fans to vote without having to getup from their couches, just by clicking their remote controls at their TV screens to select the next President or prime minister. That will be real democracy.
    William Luther Pierce

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