Difficulty of reading AM patients after the onset of vascular dementia Abstract Introduction Dementia is defined by Cummings et al. (1980) "Dementia occurs in a series of subtypes, as an acquired and sustained intellectual disorder, at least the extent of the following activities: language, memory, visual spatial skills, emotions, personality, and cognition. One of them is called vascular dementia (Brown, 1993). Vascular dementia is a disease whose most common cause is damage of the cerebral circulatory system caused by stroke (Alzheimer, Scotland, 2002).
Symptoms of vascular dementia usually begin suddenly after a stroke. The patient may have a history of hypertension, vascular disease, or previous stroke or heart attack. Vascular dementia may deteriorate over time, or it may not get worse, depending on whether the person has further caused a stroke. In some cases, symptoms may be gradually improved. As this disease gets worse, it suddenly tends to progress gradually with changing ability. Vascular dementia, which causes brain damage in the central region of the brain, can lead to progressive progressive cognitive impairment as well as AD. Unlike patients with AD, people with vascular dementia usually maintain their character and normal emotional response level even in later stages of the disease. People with vascular dementia can also prolong at night and often have other problems common to stroke patients such as depression and urinary incontinence.
F01 Vascular dementia Vascular dementia (formerly known as arteriosclerosis) dementia is characterized by the recognition of AD by its history, clinical picture, and the course of subsequent disease, including multiple infarct dementia It is distinguished from disease. Typically there is a history of transient ischemic attacks with transient consciousness disturbances, transient paralysis or blindness. Dementia can also be accompanied by a series of acute cerebrovascular disorders, or less common is a single large stroke. Some of the damage to memory and thinking becomes clear. After a certain ischemic stroke, the onset of life usually in subsequent life may be sudden, or there may be a more gradual appearance. Dementia is usually the result of cerebral infarction caused by vascular diseases including hypertensive cerebrovascular disease. Infarction is usually small, but cumulative