People with Alzheimer's disease often have other neurodegenerative conditions as well, including a less-understood disorder called frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD).
A new study suggests Alzheimer’s disease may be detectable through subtle shape changes in proteins found in the blood.
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Several blood tests have been shown to accurately diagnose Alzheimer’s disease — as previously reported by Fox News Digital — but now a new test has emerged ...
Alzheimer's disease is the most common cause of dementia, and it affects over 7 million people in the United States alone.
Scientists have long searched for ways to treat Alzheimer’s disease, the most common form of dementia. Chief among these ...
(Microgen Images/Science Photo Library/Getty Images) Problems with sleep often show up much earlier than more recognizable ...
Researchers from academia, federal agencies and national organizations, and participants enrolled in research studies focused ...
Beta amyloid protein has likely been transmitted on rare instances to people who received human growth hormone extract made from cadavers, a study finds. The protein, a key indicator of Alzheimer’s ...
The research shows impacted women experience brain changes up to 20 times faster than men.
Alzheimer’s disease is devastating to families and many of those patients also suffer from heart problems. Pioneering MUSC research show the same toxic proteins cause both, with potential for therapy.
With few treatments available to stop or reverse Alzheimer’s disease, scientists have turned to cancer drugs as a potential means of walking back cognitive decline. Alzheimer’s cases are rising in the ...