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Dr. Larry Cahill – The Differences Between Female and Male Brains – part 2

Your brain controls and coordinates everything your body does from the movement of your fingers to your heart rate. It also plays a crucial role

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A-LIST Pulse of the Community – November 2022

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29

Dr. Larry Cahill - The Differences Between Female and Male Brains - part 1

Just as the bodies of men and women are different, so are their brains.
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28

Alzheimer’s Prevention and Early Detection through Communities with Dr. Fayron Epps

Alzheimer’s prevention, early detection, and access to treatments that builds equity for all must begin within communities. 
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27

Dr. Erik K. St. Louis - Sleep and Alzheimer's Part 2

In part two of BrainStorm sleep and Alzheimer's series, Dr. Erik K. St. Louis gets down to the basics of the sleep-brain connection and the science behind it. In this episode, learn how to create the best environment for sleep.
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26

Dr. Erik St. Louis – Sleep and Alzheimer’s

Dr. St. Louis gets down to the basics of the sleep-brain connection and the science behind it. In part one of our two-part series on sleep, learn why people experience more sleep problems as they and how to measure a good night’s sleep.
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25

Drs. Ayesha and Dean Sherzai - Nutrition and Alzheimer's Part 2

In part 2 of BrainStorm, Nutrition and Alzheimer's, host Meryl Comer continues to speak with Doctors Ayesha Z. Sherzai and Dean Sherzai, a dynamic husband and wife duo. They lead the largest clinical and observational study on Alzheimer's. Their book “The Alzheimer’s Solution” on the brain-food connection shows how to reduce the risk of Alzheimer’s with a healthy diet.
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24

Drs. Ayesha and Dean Sherzai – Nutrition and Alzheimer’s

Poor nutrition is a major health problem that affects every part of the body, including the brain. It is among the top risk factors for dementia.
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August 26, 2022

Letter from Leading Alz Researchers: Journal “overstates and distorts” influence of flawed 2016 study

In a letter to the editor published in Science responding to the journal’s recent article on the apparent manipulation of data in a 2006 study of amyloid-β, two respected Alzheimer’s researchers state that the piece “overstates and distorts the effect of this paper on the Alzheimer’s field” and “does not threaten the ‘reigning theory’ of Alzheimer’s pathobiology, known as the ‘amyloid hypothesis’. The authors—Drs. Dennis Selkoe, The Vincent and Stella Coates Professor of Neurologic Diseases Harvard Medical School and Jeffrey Cummings, Director of the Chambers-Grundy Center for Transformative Neuroscience at UNLV—explain how the data in question is not a factor
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Glenda Wrenn Gordon, MD, MSHP - The Power of Telehealth

Dr. Wrenn Gordon talks about the value telehealth provides from early detection of dementia to caregiver support.
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