skyscraper

skyscraper


    Choose language
    flag-widget
    flag-widget
    flag-widget
    flag-widget
    flag-widget
    flag-widget
    flag-widget
    Synonyms and Definitions

    Use "dementia" in a sentence

    dementia example sentences

    dementia


    1. Oh, she had a terrible time with her mother, you know, once that dementia set in … dreadful it were


    2. 'Aunt Clarissa? In the end she suffered seriously from dementia, but at first it was more a case of wilfulness


    3. Maggie's charity doesn’t extend to those suffering alcoholic dementia


    4. Neurosurgery had advanced sufficiently to repair most of the effects of a serious accident, and dementia was a thing of the past


    5. had advanced dementia and the death of her beloved husband


    6. Since the dementia she was always thinking about her sister


    7. Dementia could be forestalled by an injection of nano-invaders, which did things she didn't even want to imagine


    8. It can cause the body to exercise, but if it does not exercise itself, pathways can become clogged (Beta-amyloid?) and function diminishes (dementia?)


    9. ” He rocked his head from side to side to indicate dementia


    10. Because of her severe and profound dementia the advice of the

    11. As new research reveals more areas of untapped potential in the brain, some neurologists are asking whether there might be a way for the average person to switch on these hidden skills without having to suffer the kinds of brain trauma seen in Miller’s dementia patients


    12. 5 Hertz or 1 Hertz over the left fronto-temporal lobe of 11 healthy participants — an area of the brain implicated in the savant syndrome, both in the case of ‘born savants’ and savants who emerged later in life due to fronto-temporal lobe dementia


    13. You snuck in on a meeting and it was as you imagined, the withered husks of dementia, white haired shuffling corpses


    14. By the time you reach the age of 65, roughly 5 in 100 people have developed the disease, by the age of 80 the odds have jumped to 1 in 5 and almost half of all people at the age of 90 have some signs of dementia


    15. This man had a much more serious dementia than she surmised and it couldn‘t be all because of a dog; a greater emotional beast was gnawing on the vitals of the perturbed Miccosukee


    16. Without these oils, the brain quickly withers and the unfortunate Piscador suffers a mental decline leading ultimately to dementia and death


    17. With such a huge family and all the joy and celebration, this one had its share of sickness, cancer, bickering, affairs, drinking, mental health issues, dementia, craziness, pain and suffering


    18. Several studies have tested the use of DMAE in Alzheimer’s and dementia patients


    19. Faulty genes have its greatest show on the body diseases such as “huntingtons chorea” which shows conditions in early middle age, “Jerky involuntary movements” at heads, face or limbs accompanied later by progressive dementia


    20. Use of vitamin C or vitamin E supplements, or both, has been associated with better cognitive function and a reduced risk of certain forms of dementia (not including

    21. damage appears to play a role in the development of dementia


    22. “This existential dementia of |Now| and ~Now is the isolated island of egolessness: a task without sense of who I was, what this means as purpose, and what it will mean to have done it tomorrow


    23. “Have you ever noticed how autism is emotional loss and dementia is mental loss?” a 5th unreleased version of 10 4 D2 bled into the MilITary net, even though they were already always monitoring ASIT anyway


    24. ” the being said beckoning her into the memory banks they had hoped to infect with a vireal dementia


    25. Believing the court was real during his nightmarish dementia, Roger


    26. This very specific form of dementia displays itself as confusion, impaired thought, and impaired speech


    27. The Iron Lady, just as Reagan’s mother, will eventually live out the last dozen years of her life in a state of dementia


    28. This condition, known as a subdural hematoma, alters mood and vision and elevates levels of dementia


    29. They lump it together with terms such as senility and dementia


    30. Researchers were looking for changes in his vocabulary that might have signaled an early onset of dementia

    31. The study’s authors also noted that trauma and the use of anesthesia can hasten dementia


    32. His mother, who had dementia, was traveling with her husband and was left in a small motel 100 miles away when his father was flown to a hospital in Anchorage


    33. The fighting legend now laid low by dementia


    34. Well, despite his affection for the old man, he just hoped that his father was so far out of it now that nothing could penetrate the dense cloud the dementia was solidifying around his once extraordinary mind


    35. She had a close friend from college whose third husband was an aging industrialist, now sidelined by dementia and tucked away in a plush retirement home in Great Neck


    36. ‘When she had the dementia, I mean


    37. It seemed to him that every conviction, as soon as it became effective, turned into that form of dementia the gods send upon those they wish to destroy


    38. Sara was his lover, then his wife, and later, much later, as she watched his eccentricities tumble into dementia, his nurse


    39. In late 2010, my father was experiencing the first horrors of Parkinson’s-related dementia that medication would only briefly suppress


    40. Maybe unopposed, her dementia would run amok

    41. Was he also terrified about the prospect of having two kids in college and, at the same time, a wife with dementia?


    42. Having dementia has to carry less of a stigma than that


    43. What about support for the people with Alzheimer’s disease? Where are the other fifty-one-year-olds with dementia? Where are the other people who were in the middle of their careers when this diagnosis ripped their lives right out from under them? She didn’t deny that getting Alzheimer’s was tragic at any age


    44. “Can you give me the contact information for the patients you know of with early-onset dementia so I can try to organize something on my own?”


    45. They shared stories of their earliest symptoms, their struggles to get a correct diagnosis, their strategies for coping and living with dementia


    46. The Dementia Care Conference was a national meeting for professionals involved in the care of people with dementia and their families


    47. It sounded similar to Alice’s support group and DASNI, but bigger and for those without dementia


    48. She said that Alice hadn’t returned her emails in a while, that she hadn’t been to the dementia chat room in weeks, and that she’d missed support group again yesterday


    49. Cathy said that two new people had joined their support group, and that it had been recommended to them by people who’d attended the Dementia Care Conference and had heard Alice’s speech


    50. There are over a half million people in the United States alone under the age of sixty-five diagnosed with dementia, and they’re not included in what gets talked about when people talk about Alzheimer’s






    Show more examples

    Synonyms for "dementia"

    dementedness dementia madness craziness senility mania

    "dementia" definitions

    mental deterioration of organic or functional origin