Divergent diagnostic criteria is raising concerns that some patients are being misdiagnosed and unnecessarily treated.
A decades-long cohort study shows drinking caffeinated coffee and tea in moderation is linked to lower dementia risk and ...
A new study suggests the benefits of speed training for your mind. Globe reporter Kay Lazar explains what that means.
Scientists stress that the study represents an early signal, not a medical breakthrough. It identifies a potential avenue for ...
Obesity and older age are strongly associated with low-grade inflammation in the body, a condition that appears closely ...
Cognitive speed training was linked to a reduced incidence of #Dementia for up to 20 years, according to new findings from the NIH-funded #ACTIVE study: @alzdemjournals @HopkinsMedicine ...
One type of cognitive training appears to reduce the risk of dementia 20 years later. Even a modest amount of mental exercise appears to reduce the risk of dementia for decades. NPR's John Hamilton ...
In this video, James E. Galvin, MD, MPH, professor of neurology and psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, discusses how Alzheimer's disease is ...
Drinking just two or three cups of coffee each day is enough to slash the risk of dementia by 18 percent and preserve ...
One to two cups of caffeinated tea per day helps too, researchers found after following nearly 132,000 people for 40 years.
A study published in Alzheimer’s & Dementia: Translational Research & Clinical Interventions looks at the impact of cognitive training on dementia. Dr Susan Kohlhaas, Executive Director of Research ...