Wednesday, December 10, 2008

A world without Alzheimer's and hungry Children.

We really cares about you!

Our main gold is to eliminate Alzheimer's disease through the advancement of research; at the same time to provide and enhance care and support for all affected by this disease; and to reduce the risk of dementia through the promotion of brain health. We are working very hard so that one day there would be a world without Alzheimer's disease, but for now with your donations its allow us to build homes, give medicines, foods, vitamins, caring and remove individuals who have Alzheimer's disease from the street who are homeless and from mental homes and cares for them, our services are FREE.

It hurt me very, very much that tears some times come to my eyes to see so much people here in America and around the world suffering from Alzheimer's disease and the children who go with out foods and many times are homeless.

Mary Joseph Foundation cares and we are doing everything possible to eliminate Alzheimer's disease, homelessness and hunger.

We are looking for more companies to work with us on Alzheimer's disease and children who are hungry and homeless.

To help please send all mails and donations to: Mary Joseph Foundation a non-profit organization, 137 1/2 Washington Ave, Belleville, NJ 07109

Melrose Joseph
Director
Mary Joseph Foundation

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Every 22 seconds in the world and 71 seconds in America someone get Alzheimer's

Autobiographical memory: Memory for the personal events and facts of one's life.

There is no single concept called " memory " There are two overarching types: short-term, which allows you to remember the beginning of this sentence by the time you reach the end of it, and long-term, which includes unconscious habits and reflexes, general facts and knowledge, and autobiographical memory ... memory for the personal details, facts and experiences of your life.

Just like the rest of our bodies, our brains change as we age. Most of us notice some slowed thinking and occasional problems remembering certain things. However, serious memory loss, confusion and other major changes in the way our minds work are not a normal part of aging.

Is a progressive and fatal brain disease. There are over 6 million Americans now have Alzheimer’s disease. Alzheimer's destroys brain cells, causing problems with memory, thinking and behavior severe enough to affect work, lifelong hobbies or social life. Alzheimer’s gets worse over time, and it is fatal. Today it is the seventh-leading cause of death in the United States.

We are doing everything possible to help individuals who have Alzheimer's disease and also to find a cure.

Changing The Present helps nonprofit's raise awareness Alzheimer's disease and raise money by making charitable giving more convenient, cost-efficient, and rewarding than ever before.

Register for a Premium membership for just a donation per year to take full advantage of our FREE services and online purchasing and fundraising.

Remember someone develops Alzheimer's disease
every 22 seconds and it could be you.

Don't let Alzheimer's steal
you or your love one dreams. Act now !!!

Mary Joseph Foundation a non-profit organization for Alzheimer's disease

To really see the suffering and pain that Alzheimer's disease causes you have to really see and experience the suffering of your dear love one, it was very, very hard for me to see my mother in so much pain, that many times tears would start coming from my eyes.

http://www.maryjosephfoundation.blogspot.com
http://www.marycharityfoundation.blogspot.com

Sunday, March 2, 2008

Alzheimer's disease and the affects.

A few days ago several studies on Alzheimer's disease show
memories are first processed in the entorhinal cortex, which also is where Alzheimer's seems to begin its spread.
Evidence at the cellular level shows there are two causes for the onset of Alzheimer's. Starchy plaques crowd the space between brain cells. Tangles of tau proteins clomp together, sabotaging communication pathways.
For such important structure, little is known about the circuitry of the entorhinal cortex. What is known is that the activity levels of its neurons seem to predict whether something will be remembered or forgotten, for example the entorhinal cortex is the first area in the brain damaged by Alzheimer's. It is like a small fire set by an arsonist, the disease smolders here, then works upward through the centers of speech and language and spreads across the ceiling of the brain, moving into the visual cortex in the back, the motor cortex in the front, then into the most forward part, where cognition, judgment and reasoning reside.
Having dismantled the walls and floors of the brain's major lobes, Alzheimer's descends into the subcortex , finally attacking the brain stem and choking off the most basic processes of life, swallowing, breathing, blood pressure.
Recently, researchers identified abnormal tau protein in the entorhinal cortex before dementia was even clinically detectable. For years now most researchers targeted a different symptom, the amyloid beta plaques that gum up the spaces between the brain's neurons, causing them to die.

We are our memories, and almost everything we do is guided by the experiences we have had. All of our skills, our aspirations, our hopes, dreams, and imagination come out of our experiences and the accumulated benefit we have derived from them.
It is that very foundation, however, that turns tremulous for those with Alzheimer's.
All such memories are an amalgam of associations.
We are trying our best to find a cure and at the same time helping individuals who have Alzheimer's.

There are still no Cure on the market today for Alzheimer's disease...Dr. William Thomas


Mary Joseph Foundation
137 1/2 Washington Ave,
Belleville, New Jersey 07109

Sunday, February 17, 2008

More about Alzheimer's disease

Until the late 1970s, the study of such personal memory was not considered suitable for scientific inquiry. Whatever played across the mind's screen was private and unknowable to the outside world.This lack of knowledge about how memory works made it almost impossible to unravel one of medicine's most vexing questions - the cause of Alzheimer's, an age-related disease affecting more than six million Americans.
But an examination of the latest research, some of it not yet published, shows that, neuron by neuron, scientists are finally making their way into the deepest recesses of human memory. Like the first blurry, black-and-white pictures sent back from the surface of the moon, the view is still imperfect, but memory's secret landscape is slowly being revealed.For example Scientific are now using laser and different type of wire devices to cause regression to the memory.
Science is unlocking many of the mysteries of the brain, but we don’t have all the answers yet. You can do everything “right” and still not prevent Alzheimer’s disease. What’s offered here is the best and most up-to-date information available so that you can make your own decisions about your health.

Mary Joseph Foundati0n