Top Stories
Study: Type of Pre-Alzheimer's Decline More Common
New research shows that a milder type of mental decline that often precedes Alzheimer's disease is much more common than thought.
Nearly a million older Americans slide from normal memory into mild impairment each year, doctors reported Monday at a medical conference in Chicago. That's in addition to the half million Americans who develop full-blown Alzheimer's or other forms of dementia.
The problem is sure to grow as Baby Boomers age. Dr. Ralph Nixon, a New York psychiatrist and adviser to the Alzheimer's Association, was blunt. "We're facing a crisis," he said.
© Copyright 2012, Associated Press
(2008-08-03)
CHICAGO, IL
(Associated Press) -
New research shows that a milder type of mental decline that often precedes Alzheimer's disease is much more common than thought.
Nearly a million older Americans slide from normal memory into mild impairment each year, doctors reported Monday at a medical conference in Chicago. That's in addition to the half million Americans who develop full-blown Alzheimer's or other forms of dementia.
The problem is sure to grow as Baby Boomers age. Dr. Ralph Nixon, a New York psychiatrist and adviser to the Alzheimer's Association, was blunt. "We're facing a crisis," he said.
© Copyright 2012, Associated Press
