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Memory not what it used to be? Here’s how to know if it’s age-related or a sign of dementia
We all experience occasional confusion: A word that slips the mind, a forgotten name, or a key misplaced somewhere else. With age, such phenomena become more common, but in most cases, they are ...
Los Angeles Times: Peter Whitehouse, professor in the College of Arts and Sciences, discussed how the Alzheimer’s Association would stand to increase its potential donor base by expanding the net of ...
John Stennard, a healthy study volunteer taking the Fastball test in his home, with Dr George Stohart from the University of Bath. A simple brainwave test developed at the University of Bath has been ...
You walk into a room and forget why you came there. You can’t remember where you put your keys five minutes ago. You struggle to recall the name of someone you’ve known for years. Everyone around you ...
Doctors are only just getting to grips with LATE – a newly recognised form of cognitive decline behind up to one in five ...
Occasional forgetfulness is normal, but persistent memory loss may signal dementia or Alzheimer’s disease. With rising cases ...
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