WSJ Article featuring ApoE4.Info
WSJ Article featuring ApoE4.Info
Thanks to our Theresa for putting yourself out there! Here’s the story: Should you find out if you’re at risk for Alzheimer’s? Share your thoughts. Is it better to know your APOE status or do you wish you never found out?
Re: WSJ Article featuring ApoE4.Info
I tried but you need a subscription.... bummer
Male 4/4 56 yrs., "Live, Laugh, Love"
Re: WSJ Article featuring ApoE4.Info
Hmm, try googling the title directly or using our ApoE4.Info Facebook page. No one has mentioned that they couldn't access it... yet.I tried but you need a subscription.... bummer
Re: WSJ Article featuring ApoE4.Info
I don't do facebook for various reason.... lol
Male 4/4 56 yrs., "Live, Laugh, Love"
Re: WSJ Article featuring ApoE4.Info
I found it.... good article!Julie G wrote:Hmm, try googling the title directly...I tried but you need a subscription.... bummer
Male 4/4 56 yrs., "Live, Laugh, Love"
Re: WSJ Article featuring ApoE4.Info
Theresa, thanks for putting yourself out there! I didn’t know you are a retired Navy commander. Thank you as well for your service to our country. (I was a Navy brat.)
I did a search on the title with quotation marks around it. That worked.
I’m glad I found out about my 4/4 status. Had I not done so, it’s likely I never would have learned about my mold toxicity, the SIBO that it caused, and other root causes. The same goes for my coronary artery disease. I believe I now have a good chance to avoid Alzheimer’s altogether or at least delay its onset. And I’ve since stabilized my coronary artery disease.
My husband and I are beginning the process of updating our will and powers of attorney. I will discuss my 4/4 status with our attorney and incorporate my wishes accordingly.
When I first discovered my status, I was terrified for many months and periodically since then as I’ve learned some test results. But I have no regrets about learning my status. In fact, thank God I did.
I did a search on the title with quotation marks around it. That worked.
I’m glad I found out about my 4/4 status. Had I not done so, it’s likely I never would have learned about my mold toxicity, the SIBO that it caused, and other root causes. The same goes for my coronary artery disease. I believe I now have a good chance to avoid Alzheimer’s altogether or at least delay its onset. And I’ve since stabilized my coronary artery disease.
My husband and I are beginning the process of updating our will and powers of attorney. I will discuss my 4/4 status with our attorney and incorporate my wishes accordingly.
When I first discovered my status, I was terrified for many months and periodically since then as I’ve learned some test results. But I have no regrets about learning my status. In fact, thank God I did.
ApoE 4/4 - When I was in 7th grade, my fellow students in history class called me "The Brain" because I had such a memory for detail. I excelled at memorization and aced tests. This childhood memory helps me cope!
Re: WSJ Article featuring ApoE4.Info
Nice article, but ugh!
A spokesman for the Alzheimer’s Association said such tests have little value because they provide only general information about risk—and because there is no effective treatment for the disease.
Sonoma Mike
4/4
4/4
-
- Contributor
- Posts: 107
- Joined: Thu Oct 11, 2018 10:12 am
Re: WSJ Article featuring ApoE4.Info
I do often regret opening that Pandora`s box because there`s nothing that I can do to change my dna. I never got on with my parents and now I just have yet another reason to be angry with them.