Struggling to Function with a Neurological Disorder

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When witnessing someone with a Neurological disorder, one counts his/her blessings. People with Neurological disorders struggle to function normally and knowing there is no cure to help them, it is frustrating. Cancer patients do struggle just like the patients with Neurological disorders but there is more patients with Neurological disorders than Cancer patients. The problem is more funding is given to Cancer research as opposed to Neurological research. A Patient with a Neurological disorder can be disabled their whole life without being able to do anything. It would only be fair to help those patients enjoy their life just like one does. If more funding was given to Neurological research, these patients could have a brighter future ahead of them. Fundings’ should be taken away from Cancer research to help Neurologists find new cures or new treatments to Neurological disorders that affect the lives of many people in America.
The brain is a very complex organ that researchers are still trying to fathom. The main parts are the Frontal lobe, Central sulcus, Parietal lobe, Occipital lobe, Cerebellum, Temporal lobe, Sylvian fissure. Each of these parts are responsible for the various movements one does, the thinking process, memory and many other functions. For example the Frontal Lobe can be associated with reasoning, planning, parts of speech, movement, emotions, and problem solving. When one of these parts are damaged and/or not functioning properly, this could lead to a Neurological disorder. But the brain can constantly adjust to new situations or diseases by making new internal connections this is known as plasticity. The brain also has two main cells which carry out all the information and are vital one functioning properly....

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...is prostate cancer. Lung cancer and colorectal cancer affects both women and men.
Cancer prevalence is referred to as the number of living people who have been diagnosed with cancer either in the past, it also includes the people who have been diagnosed recently. The way cancer prevalence is determined is by how often a certain cancer occurs and how long a person with that cancer lives after they have been diagnosed (survival). This basically means that the cancer with the longest survival will have a higher prevalence count and vice versa, the cancer with a shorter survival will have a less prevalence count. The total count for all cancers among men in the U.S. since 2010 is 6,079,000 and for women the total count is 6,494,000 for a total of 13,028,00 patients. This is the total number of patients in the United States who have been either diagnosed or who have it.

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