metalblue
Well-Known Member
Not as clear cut as that.
People with MND appear to fall into four groups: around 50% are unaffected by cognitive change. around 35% experience mild cognitive change, with specific deficits in executive functions, language and/or social cognition. up to 15% develop frontotemporal dementia (FTD), either at the same time or after diagnosis of MND.
Motor Neurone Disease (MND) | Fact Sheet | Health Information | Brain & Spine Foundation
Motor Neurone Disease (MND) | Fact Sheet - information, support and advice from the Brain & Spine Foundation.www.brainandspine.org.uk
Thanks for this mate. Might still be a good case study cohort for the 50%. Horrible illness.
Ideally we’d have a cure for all these things rather than discussing folk wanting to kill themselves. I appreciate that’s wishful thinking as new conditions will come up all the time. Some of these conditions are as a result of our own ways of life - breast cancer, for example, was fairly rare (certainly not the big killer it is today) until the 1950s then it really exploded in cases - that explosion is down to the contraceptive pill. Something to do with the hormones which is why it is more common post menopause hence why we scan over 50s routinely.