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Will You Suffer From Alzheimer's? You Might Find Out At 50
Submitted by Greg on July 17, 2006 - 8:48pm.
Research presented at an international Alzheimer's conference may give doctors the tools to predict whether a seemingly healthy middle aged patient will develop dementia -- even twenty years before it occurs. According to Newsday, some of the findings presented at the International Conference on Alzheimer's Disease and Related Disorders in Madrid are:
Other research presented at the conference supports a diabetes-Alzheimer's correlation, and suggests that the class of drugs used to treat type 2 diabetes -- thiazolidinediones -- may reduce the brain cell inflammation believed by some researchers to be implicated in dementia. More puzzling, other research found that gradual (unplanned) weight loss in women may precede dementia by a number of years. Scientists believe this is likely correlation, not causation: the subjects "might have less initiative and lose interest in eating, they might develop a duller sense of taste and smell, or they might experience an earlier sense of satiety (feeling full). Also, because, we didn't observe the anticipatory weight loss in men, the weight loss could have something specific to do with postmenopausal hormonal changes." --- The U.S. National Institute on Aging has Alzheimer's information here. Read Similar LifeTwo Stories:
Find More By Clicking On These Links:Topic: Brain Health
Tags: aging | research | brain health | memory | health | Alzheimer's disease Type: Feature Actions »
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