4.5 (690) · $ 19.00 · In stock
Cognitive impairment and a build-up of abnormal proteins in the brain are better known tell-tale signs of Alzheimer's disease, but other clues may reveal its presence earlier in the piece. Among those is a reduced blood flow to the brain, and scientists from Cornell University believe they have now found an explanation for these blockages, raising new hopes for treatments that target one of the disease's potential root causes.
Unclogging blood flow to the brain could open the floodgates for
Frontiers Peripheral Blood and Salivary Biomarkers of Blood–Brain Barrier Permeability and Neuronal Damage: Clinical and Applied Concepts
Stiff Vessels and Low Blood Flow in the Brain Forewarn of Dementia - Neuroscience News
Alzheimer's Disease and Vascular Aging: JACC Focus Seminar
Blood vessel breakthrough major step towards Alzheimers treatment - BHF
Cortical-blood vessel assembloids exhibit Alzheimer's disease phenotypes by activating glia after SARS-CoV-2 infection
Researchers return to Alzheimer's vaccines, buoyed by recent drug success
Blood–brain barrier breakdown in Alzheimer disease and other neurodegenerative disorders
Blood-brain barrier leakage in Alzheimer's disease: From discovery to clinical relevance - ScienceDirect
Blood–brain barrier link to human cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease
Cerebral blood flow regulation and neurovascular dysfunction in Alzheimer disease
The Statins (Chapter 4) - Managing Discovery in the Life Sciences
1914–1945: Epilepsy in the Age of Catastrophe (Two) - The Idea of Epilepsy