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77 Stories on Geriatric Medicine
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Time.com: Alzheimer's Protein Tracked in Injured Brains

cientists for the first time have peered into people's brains to directly measure the ebb and flow of a substance notorious for its role in Alzheimer's disease

Breakthrough drug 'could halt' Alzheimer's

British researchers say a new drug could effectively halt the progression of Alzheimer's disease, offering hope to millions.

Time.com: Alzheimer's Research Holds Promise

In a field of inquiry that has yielded much disappointment, scientists studying Alzheimer's disease announce some hopeful news

Time.com: Fit Alzheimer's Patients Better Off

Patients in the early stages of Alzheimer's disease who performed better on a treadmill test had less atrophy in the areas of the brain that control memory

Time.com: Alzheimer's Vaccine Stopped Plaque, Not Dementia

Some doctors have long suspected that if the plaque that builds up in the brains of patients with Alzheimer's disease could be removed, they could be saved. But a new vaccine that did just that suggests the theory is wrong

Time.com: Physical Fitness May Slow Alzheimer's

Getting a lot of exercise may help slow brain shrinkage in people with early Alzheimer's disease, a preliminary study suggests

Time.com: New Clue to the Cause of Alzheimer's

The brains of people with the memory-robbing form of dementia are cluttered with a plaque made up of beta-amyloid, a sticky protein

Time.com: Bright Lights May Hold Off Dementia

A new study shows that patients in nursing homes with brighter lights do better than those in dimly lit facilities. Why?

Early Alzheimer's patients pressing for research, resources

Don Hayen has a handy way of deflecting the instant pity that comes when he reveals his Alzheimer's disease: "But I haven't lost my keys all day," he quickly jokes.

X-Rays, sunshine: Could radiation be hurting your health?

When Sheri Diehl, a Chicago-area flight attendant, got -- and finally stayed --pregnant after four miscarriages in the 1990s, she contacted her supervisor and asked to stop flying immediately. Her biggest worry? Radiation. She knew the airplane's shell didn't protect her from the sun's rays at high altitude. Diehl and her fellow flight attendants had long wondered -- Could there be unknown health risks for frequent fliers? -- which now included her baby. "I wasn't taking any chances," she says.

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