A new study has found that people who have dementia are, on average, diagnosed 3.5 years after symptoms first appear. This is even longer — an average of 4.1 years after symptoms first show — for ...
The number of people living with early onset dementia in Britain has increased by 69 per cent in the last 10 years - Georgina Smith Most of us try not to think about dementia in our younger years. We ...
Anne-Marie Duff details brother Eddie’s shock early onset dementia diagnosis in his 40s - ‘It was very sad’ the actor said ...
Dementia is a group of disorders that gradually impair memory, thinking and daily functioning. Alzheimer's disease (AD), the ...
New research suggests that unusual changes in eating behavior—rather than memory loss—may be one of the earliest signs of a ...
Frontotemporal dementia is a brain disease that affects the parts of your brain responsible for behavior, speech and memory. “Frontotemporal” stems from the names frontal and temporal lobes, which are ...
Early signs of dementia can resemble normal cognitive changes due to aging. But timely diagnosis can help people get the treatment and support they need. A new research analysis shows it takes an ...
Early detection is widely regarded as a fundamental step in managing Alzheimer's in the current world. The 2024 Lancet ...
What are some significant markers that indicate we’re growing older?Wrinkles on our skin? — Yes. A grey streak or two? — Yes. The body’s pace of bounding back after a trying episode? — Double yes.But ...
Developing depression half a month after gastrointestinal (GI) disease presented an elevated risk of dementia among participants in a November study published in Alzheimer’s & Dementia.
People with dementia are diagnosed an average of 3.5 years after symptoms are first noticed, or even longer (4.1 years) for those with early-onset dementia, finds a new study led by UCL researchers.