ABC Home | Radio | Television | News | Your Local ABC | More Subjects… | Shop


Past Programs

Subjects A-Z

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z #

Alzheimer's and Dementia - 2005

2008 | 2006 | 2005 | 2004

Grandad is an artist! Dementia and the creative mind.

12/11/2005
Dementia is commonly regarded as a cruel and relentlessly progressive disorder -where, over time, a person is stripped of their unique skills and identity. But recently clinicians have noted not only deficits in dementia patients, but that other cognitive skills remain intact - and can even become accentuated. Remarkably a number of patients with dementia develop new artistic abilities. According to neurologist Bruce Miller, from the Memory and Aging Centre in California, the maintenance and even growth of artistic skills in dementia patients offers insight into creativity and brain plasticity. Bruce and Professor John Hodges, from the University of Cambridge, consider what we know about dementia and its impact on personality and ability.

The Getting of Wisdom

16/07/2005
None of us are getting any younger. As our bodies show signs of wear, so do our brains. We get forgetful, are confronted by new ideas and perplexed by new technologies. The world appears to be moving way too fast, as we sink into memories of the good ol' days. Eminent neuropsychologist and author Elkhonon Goldberg argues we have no excuse. His message - make your brain sweat if you want to enjoy your mental life to its fullest. And his suggestion is that the two hemispheres of our brain age differently as we wise up. Gretchen Miller reports.

Dementia (Part 2) - Cell Therapies on the Cutting Edge

02/07/2005
There's a slow and inexorable death going on in the brains of people with Alzheimer's disease. As neurons disappear, your cognitive self gradually takes leave also. This week, the cutting edge of cell therapies for neurodegenerative disease. Natasha Mitchell reports on the first gene therapy trial for Alzheimer's disease. The results are impressive, groundbreaking even...but the trial asked 8 patients to weigh up life and death before they agreed to participate. This is medical research at the coalface.

Dementia (Part 1) - Dancing With Dementia: Christine Bryden's Story

25/06/2005
Christine Bryden was a high flying 46 year old, single mother with 3 daughters, when she was diagnosed with Alzheimer's Disease. Told she'd be pushing up the daisies by 2004 - 10 years on, with two books and a devoted husband, she's still here. Hers is a journey into a black hole of life unremembered, of learning to live peacefully in the present, and of stripping away the cognitive self. The first of two programs on dementia, this week a powerful and personal insight, next week - extraordinary developments in cell therapy from the scientific coal face.