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Dementia

Significant dementia risk attributable to small blood vessel damage

Published in Law and Health Weekly, April 26th, 2008

Autopsy data of 221 men and women found that the brains of one-third of individuals who had dementia before death showed evidence of small, cumulative blood vessel damage that can arise from hypertension or diabetes.

Dr. Thomas Montine and colleagues analyzed the brain tissue of select volunteers from the Adult Changes in Thought (ACT) study, wherein 3,400 adult participants (65+) in the Seattle region agreed to undergo neurological and psychological tests every two years until their death

While some results were unsurprising, such as showing that changes due to Alzheimer's disease or the formation of Lewy bodies (structures indicative of a...

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