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Early Onset Alzheimer's: One Year Later

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13WHAM ABC News

Pittsford, N.Y. It has been one year since we met Amy Norton, a woman from Pittsford who was diagnosed with earlyonset Alzheimer's disease two and a half years ago. She was 43 years old. We checked back to see how life has changed for her, her husband and two teens. The day we visited Amy in the family's home, we also met her caregiver. Amy now has two caregivers who split the week keeping her company. These visits are just one of the many changes for the Norton family in the last year. While working on a craft project, Amy is excitedly speaking to her caregiver, Virginia, but her speech is largely unintelligible. This, too, is a change for her. Amy barely spoke when we first met her. "Really, for the last six or seven months, we really don't know what she's saying to us," Amy's husband Brian explained. "But she's telling a story. We try to read into what she's saying to us and go along with it." Brian Norton said Amy has also become less aware of her condition so she's more relaxed and calmer with fewer bouts of aggression. "A year ago she was more closed up for many reasons," Brian said. "As she's lost some selfawareness through the disease, she's become more comfortable, relaxed, smiles more, gives hugs more." Although Alzheimer's has robbed Amy of her memory, parts of her personality have returned. She walks more slowly these days, but she's able to keep up wi

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