Mayo Clinic on Alzheimer's Disease and other Dementias, 3rd Ed
An essential resource to address Alzheimer's disease and other dementias including the latest advancements in diagnosis and treatment from the experts at Mayo Clinic.
Jonathan Graff-Radford, M.D., is a behavioral neurologist at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, where he evaluates and treats patients with Alzheimer's disease, Lewy body dementia, and other types of cognitive disorders. An associate professor of neurology at the Mayo Clinic College of Medicine and Science, Dr. Graff-Radford also serves as a co-investigator in the Mayo Clinic Alzheimer's Disease Research Center and the Mayo Clinic Study of Aging, where he focuses on identifying therapeutic targets for cognitive impairment and improving diagnostic accuracy of cognitive disorders.
Dementia is a serious health challenge, and by some estimates the number of people living with dementia could triple by 2050. While Alzheimer’s disease is the most common type of dementia, other types also affect adults worldwide, causing loss of cognitive functions such as memory, reasoning and judgment. Although the diseases that cause dementia have long been considered difficult and unrelenting, recent advances offer hope. Are there ways you can lower your risk of dementia? Can it be prevented? Can you live well with dementia? If so, how? This fully revised and updated third edition of Mayo Clinic on Alzheimer’s Disease and Other Dementias provides answers to these important questions and more: How do sleeplessness, hearing loss, social isolation, and other risk factors contribute to cognitive decline? How can exercise and healthy foods preserve brain function? What are the neurological changes that can occur in the brain, and how is normal aging different from aging with dementia? How are blood and genetic biomarker tests breaking new ground in diagnosing dementia? Why is it increasingly important to identify dementia in its early stages? What are the unique signs and symptoms of Lewy body dementia, frontotemporal degeneration, vascular cognitive impairment, hippocampal sclerosis of aging, and normal pressure hydrocephalus? What are the stages of Alzheimer’s disease? Can new and emerging medications slow the progression of Alzheimer’s disease? What day-to-day coping strategies can help people live well with dementia? How can caregivers care for themselves?