Lisa Genova - Still Alice

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Still Alice: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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SUMMARY: "Powerful, insightful, tragic, inspirational…and all too true." Alireza Atri, Massachusetts General Hospital Neurologist “Readers…are artfully and realistically led through…a window into what to expect, highlighting the importance of allowing the person with the disease to remain a vibrant and contributing member of the community…" Peter Reed, PhD, Director of Programs, National Alzheimer's Association “With grace and compassion, Lisa Genova writes about the enormous white emptiness created by Alzheimer’s in the mind of the still-too-young and active Alice. A kind of ominous suspense attends her gathering forgetfulness, and Genova puts us, sympathetically, right inside her plight. Somehow, too, she portrays the family’s response as a loving one, and hints at the other hopeful, helpful response that science will eventually provide.” Mopsy Kennedy, Improper Bostonian "An intensely intimate portrait of Alzheimer's seasoned with highly accurate and useful information about this insidious and devastating disease." Dr. Rudolph E. Tanzi, co-author, Decoding Darkness: The Search for the Genetic Causes of Alzheimer's Disease “Her (Alice's) thought patterns are so eerily like my own...amazing. It was like being in my own head and like being in hers.” James Smith, diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, age 45 “...something for the world to read.” Jeanne Lee, author of Just Love Me: My Life Turned Upside-Down By Alzheimer’s “A laser-precise light into the lives of people with dementia and the people who love them.” Carole Mulliken, Co-Founder of DementiaUSA "A work of pure genius. This is the book that I and many of my colleagues have anxiously awaited. The reader will journey down Dementia Road in a way that only those of us with Dementia have experienced. Until now." Charley Schneider, author of Don't Bury Me, It Ain't Over Yet

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"Names, words in conversation, where I put my BlackBerry, why something is on my to-do list."

"Okay."

Alice watched her doctor closely. Her confession didn't seem to grab her in any way. Dr. Moyer received the information like a priest listening to a teenage boy's admission of impure thoughts about a girl. She probably heard this type of complaint from perfectly healthy people countless times a day. Alice almost apologized for being so alarmist, silly even, for wasting her doctor's time. Everyone forgot these sorts of things, especially as they got older. Add menopause and that she was always doing three things at once and thinking of twelve, and these kinds of memory lapses suddenly seemed small, ordinary, harmless, and even reasonably expected. Everyone's stressed. Everyone's tired. Everyone forgets things.

"I also became disoriented in Harvard Square. I didn't know where I was for at least a couple of minutes before it all came back to me."

Dr. Moyer ceased documenting symptoms on her evaluation sheet and looked directly at Alice. That grabbed her.

"Did you have any tightness in your chest?"

"No."

"Did you have any numbness or tingling?"

"No."

"Did you have a headache or were you dizzy?"

"No."

"Did you notice any heart palpitations?"

"My heart was pounding, but that was after I became confused, more like an adrenaline response to being scared. I remember feeling great, actually, just before it happened."

"Did anything else unusual happen that day?"

"No, I'd just come home from Los Angeles."

"Are you having any hot flashes?"

"No. Well, I felt what could've been one while I was disoriented, but again, I think I was just scared."

"Okay. How are you sleeping?"

"Fine."

"How many hours are you getting each night?"

"Five to six."

"Is this a change from what it's been in the past?"

"No."

"Any difficulty falling asleep?"

"No."

"How many times do you typically wake up during the night?"

"I don't think I do."

"Do you go to bed at the same time every night?"

"Usually. Except when I travel, which has been a lot lately."

"Where have you traveled?"

"In the last few months, California, Italy, New Orleans, Florida, New Jersey."

"Were you sick after any of these trips? Any fevers?"

"No."

"Are you taking any medications, anything for allergies, supplements, anything that you might not normally think of as a medicine?"

"Just a multivitamin."

"Any heartburn?"

"No."

"Any weight changes?"

"No."

"Any bleeding in your urine or bowel movements?"

"No."

She asked each question rapidly on the heels of each answer, and the topics jumped from one to the next before Alice had time to follow the reasoning behind them. As if she were riding a roller coaster with her eyes shut, she couldn't predict which way she was being turned next.

"Are you feeling more anxious or stressed than typical?"

"Just about not being able to remember things. Otherwise, no."

"How are things with your husband?"

"Fine."

"Do you think your mood is pretty good?"

"Yes."

"Do you think you could be depressed?"

"No."

Alice knew depression. Following the deaths of her mother and sister when she was eighteen, she'd lost her appetite, she'd been unable to sleep for more than a couple of hours at a time despite being endlessly tired, and she'd lost an interest in enjoying anything. It had lasted a little over a year, and she'd never experienced anything like it since. This was entirely different. This wasn't a job for Prozac.

"Do you drink alcohol?"

"Just socially."

"How much?"

"One or two glasses of wine with dinner, maybe a little more on a special occasion."

"Any drug use?"

"No."

Dr. Moyer looked at her, thinking. She tapped her pen on her notes as she read them. Alice suspected the answer wasn't anywhere on that piece of paper.

"So am I in menopause?" she asked as she gripped her parchment-papered seat with both hands.

"Yes. We can run an FSH, but everything you tell me is completely consistent with menopause. The average age of onset is forty-eight to fifty-two, so you're right in there. You may continue to get a couple of periods a year for a while. That's perfectly normal."

"Can estrogen replacement help with the memory problems?"

"We don't put women on estrogen replacement anymore, unless they're having sleep disturbances, really awful hot flashes, or they're already osteoporotic. I don't think your memory problems are due to menopause."

The blood rushed from Alice's head. Precisely the words she'd dreaded and only recently dared to consider. With that one, professionally uttered opinion, her tidy and safe explanation shattered. Something was wrong with her, and she wasn't sure that she was ready to hear what it was. She fought the impulses growing louder inside her, begging her to either lie down or get the hell out of that examining room immediately.

"Why not?"

"The symptoms of memory disturbances and disorientation listed for menopause are secondary to poor sleep hygiene. Those women aren't coping well cognitively because they aren't sleeping. It's possible that you're not sleeping as well as you think you are. Perhaps your schedule and jet lag are taking a toll, perhaps you're worrying about things throughout the night."

Alice thought about the times she'd suffered from fuzzy thinking caused by bouts of sleep deprivation. She certainly hadn't played at the top of her mental game during the last weeks of each pregnancy, following the birth of each child, and at times, when she was up against a grant deadline. In none of those circumstances, however, did she get lost in Harvard Square.

"Maybe. Could I suddenly need more sleep because I'm older or because I'm in menopause?"

"No. I don't usually see that."

"If it's not lack of sleep, what are you thinking?" she asked, the clarity and confidence now completely absent from her voice.

"Well, I'm concerned about the disorientation in particular. I don't think it was a vascular event. I think we should do some tests. I'm going to send you for blood work, a mammogram, and bone density because it's time, and a brain MRI."

A brain tumor. She hadn't even considered that. A new predator loomed in her imagination, and she felt the ingredients of panic once again brewing in her gut.

"If you don't think it was a stroke, what are you looking for in the MRI?"

"It's always good to definitively rule these things out. Make the appointment for the MRI and then one to see me right after, and we'll go over everything."

Dr. Moyer had avoided answering the question directly, but Alice didn't push her to reveal her suspicions. And Alice didn't share her tumor theory. They would both just have to wait and see.

WILLIAM JAMES HALL HOUSED THE departments of psychology, sociology, and social anthropology and was located just beyond the gates of Harvard Yard on Kirkland Street, a region referred to by students as Siberia. Geography, however, was not the most prominent factor that alienated it from the main campus. William James Hall could never be mistaken for any of the stately, classically collegiate structures that adorned the prestigious Yard and housed the freshman dormitories and classes in mathematics, history, and English. It could, however, be mistaken for a parking garage. It possessed no Doric or Corinthian columns, no red brick, no Tiffany stained glass, no spires, no grand atrium, no physical detail whatsoever that might obviously or subtly affiliate it with its parent institution. It was a 210-foot, unimaginative beige block, quite possibly the inspiration for B. F. Skinner's box. Not surprisingly, it had never been featured in the student walking tour or the Harvard calendar, spring, summer, winter, or fall.

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