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(Excerpted from The New York Times, Tuesday, Sept. 19, 2006)

Diagnosis: Dementia May Follow Higher Weight Loss in Aging

Vital Signs column

Weight loss in people over 65 can be the result of normal aging, but new research suggests that it may also be an early indicator of Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia...

Older people, those in poorer health and people with cardiovascular disease lost more weight than others. But even after statistically accounting for these factors and others, the correlation between dementia and the doubling of the rate of weight loss persisted.

Dr. John C. Morris, a professor of neurology at Washington University in St. Louis, stressed that this does not mean that weight loss predicts dementia -- the magnitude of loss is too small. But he said: "What this means for the future is that we may someday be able to identify and treat people even before they have memory symptoms. Then we're preventing the disease."




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•   Diagnosis: Dementia May Follow Higher Weight Loss in Aging

Vital Signs volumn

The New York Times, Tuesday, Sept. 19, 2006
Byline: Nicholas Bakalar

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Related Information
Media Assistance:

Joni Westerhouse
Executive Director for Medical Communications
westerhousej@wustl.edu

(314) 286-0120
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Related Groups:

Schools:
School of Medicine

Departments:
Neurology

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Related Topics:
Aging
Aging and Mental Health
Alzheimer's Disease / Memory
Brain / Neuro / Spinal
Caregiving for Older Americans
Medical / Pharmaceutical Research Issues
Medical Ethics
Medical Science
Mental Health / Illness
Nutrition / Diet / Health
Productive Aging

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Revised:

Friday, Jan. 12, 2007


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