Alzheimer emerged as one of the most dominant cognitive disorders influencing millions of people especially in the United States.
There are different symptoms of Alzheimer including cognitive decline, hyperactivity, panic disorder, sleep apnea, fatigue, snoozing, hallucination, dreams, memory variations, dizziness, abdominal ache, poor digestive system, breathe throbbing, chronic headache, irritation, quietness, poor expression of language and chronic mental changes.
The major causes behind Alzheimer are hereditary factors, head injury, drugs, lack of exercise, binge eating, lack of sleeping, societal burdens, tensions, unemployment, chronic melancholic behaviors, etc.
But, dementia is the biggest cause of Alzheimer including numerous factors like hypothyroidism, Parkinson, vitamin B1 deficiency, vitamin B12 shortage, Huntington disorder, fluids insufficiency, syphilis, folate paucity, subdural hematoma, hypercalcaemia, bipolar disorder, renal failure, cardiovascular diseases and porphyria diagnosis of dementia.
The dementia people are often remained into extreme silence and out of the world as they are in need of support, care, love, affection, enjoyment, cheer, smile and gaming.
Meanwhile, the psychologists of the United States noted, “The computer games could emphatically help the dementia patients in developing them a sense of cheer, humor and fun as it led many of the U.S and U.K dementias people into some sort of relieve and lightness”.
The dementia people are getting improved day by day as they are given different computer games according to their liking and disliking and they enjoyed it which gave them a sigh of relief and a sense of agility and intelligence, according to The British Psychological Society’ Research.
We are launching more and more different computer games for the dementia people in order to find out their liking and disliking interests and place them into world of happiness and charm. In this way, we have designed our project plan consisting of a number of researchers conducting computer games aptitudes among dementia patients, interpreted by Arlene Astell along with her colleagues working at the University of St Andrews and Dundee.
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