Free online event starts Nov 11, 2022 Brain Health Breakthroughs
There is no lack of information on ways we can improve our brains and prevent dementia. The above event includes cases and research on actual reversal.
Once memory loss becomes evident and testing shows brain deterioration, the conventional medical prognosis is poor. The neurologist will likely offer a pharmaceutical, and tell the patient, correctly, that the drug can only ‘slow the decline’, it cannot prevent or reverse dementia. And, like most drugs, it will not be successful in all patients.
At this point a critical question should be asked: can dementia be reversed? Increasingly, the answer is yes.
Some neuroscientists and functional clinicians are seeing success that goes beyond prevention. And they are recognizing several things: 1) dementia starts long before symptoms manifest; 2) the causes and pathways into dementia are many; 3) each patient is unique and treatment plans must be personalized; 4) reversing dementia requires hard work and family/community support; 5) nutrition, environment, and lifestyle are critical players in both creating and reversing dementia; and 6) rebuilding the brain is possible.
In Brain Health Breakthroughs ten interviews with leading scientists and clinicians will give some of the latest information on brain health, clinical trials, and dementia reversal. This type of dementia treatment is coming largely from the realm of functional and lifestyle medicine.
With its focus on place-based community, lifestyle medicine, healing homes, and high-quality local foods, Living Well Locally hopes to support the future of reversing one of America’s most challenging and costly diseases. While simultaneously improving the economy and quality of life in America’s rural communities and urban neighborhoods.
The following list includes prominent efforts to improve and reverse dementia; it is by no means exhaustive. Practitioners across diverse alternative medicine disciplines are helping patients prevent and reverse chronic diseases, including dementia, and rebuild personal health.
Do you have a story of dementia improvement? Or thoughts to share? Or corrections to offer? We appreciate your input.
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