DIAD: Families from Argentina, Canada, Minnesota Rally a Global Community Genetics Propels DIAN Toward Therapies ASOs: Wave of the Future in Alzheimer’s Therapeutics? As DIAN Wraps Up Anti-Aβ Drug Arms, it Sprouts Tau, Primary Prevention Arms On July 13,
Analysis of a chimeric mouse shows that the cells express the same genes they do in the human brain, survey their environment, and respond to injuries and amyloid.
In mice, the back of the brain, near the neck, contains lymphatic vessels that are specialized to take up cerebrospinal fluid and deliver it to cervical lymph nodes.
Middle-aged people who exercise more are less likely to become amyloid-positive. In late life, people with brain amyloid who exercise declined more slowly and had less brain shrinkage over the following years.
New PET Staging Scheme for Amyloid? Physical Activity May Shield the Brain from the Onslaught of Aβ Crenezumab Update: Baseline Data from Colombian Prevention Trial Colombian Cohort Delivers Data on Blood NfL Rare Luck: Two Copies of ApoE2 Shield Against
New Tool Kit Helps Physicians Recognize and Manage Lewy Body Dementias Consortia Assemble Worldwide to Take on Lewy Body Dementia Can Researchers Detect Dementia With Lewy Bodies at the Prodromal Stage? Dementia with Lewy bodies is a devastating disorder,
Much of the neuron loss in rTg4510 mice comes from accidental disruptions in mouse genes rather than expression of mutant tau. Pathology spreads quickly in human tau knock-ins.
Going Viral: Alzheimer’s Research at Herpes Conference Herpesvirus: Trigger for Many Brain Pathologies? In light of recent work implicating human herpesviruses in AD, virologists invited Alzheimer’s researchers to join them at the 11th International Confe