WEBINAR 2017-10-16 Despite being arguably the second most common dementing disorder, dementia with Lewy bodies, aka DLB, remains both mysterious and understudied. On Tuesday, October 10, 2017, the Lewy Body Dementia Association and Alzforum co-hosted a webinar discussion w
WEBINAR 2017-04-10 If age is the strongest risk factor for Alzheimer’s and other neurodegenerative diseases, how come some nonagenarians stay sharp while others lose their edge? Genetics beyond the known genes linked to pathologies, such as amyloid plaques and neurofibrilla
WEBINAR 2016-12-07 Humans are not alone in accumulating Aβ in their brain. Squirrel monkeys, vervets, lemurs, apes, other nonhuman primates, and even dogs develop copious amyloid plaques and cerebral amyloid angiopathy as they age. However, most animals are spared the neuro
WEBINAR 2016-04-08 In the April 8 Lancet Neurology, researchers led by Bob Olsson at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden, reported the most comprehensive meta-analysis of published Alzheimer’s disease fluid biomarker data to date. The researchers scoured literature going b
WEBINAR 2016-03-28 Multiple lines of evidence have converged on the idea that toxic variants of Aβ, α-synuclein, and tau worm their way from one cell to the next, seeding the misfolding and aggregation of normal proteins as they go. In this manner, a growing number of scien
WEBINAR 2016-03-10 The amyloid hypothesis has dominated Alzheimer’s disease research for 25 years and generated major advances for the field. But as noted by Bart De Strooper and Eric Karran in the February 11 Cell, some of that new knowledge does not sit well with the hypo
WEBINAR 2015-11-25 Have you ever been jolted wide awake by—biostatistics? That’s what happened on the last morning of the Clinical Trials on Alzheimer’s Disease conference held November 5-7 in Barcelona, Spain. At 8 a.m., as sleepy CTADeers slowly shuffled in, Suzanne Hendr
WEBINAR 2015-10-08 Could the protein aggregates that cause neurodegeneration turn out to be the cellular equivalent of ice cubes? Scientists investigating how proteins naturally transition between gas-like solutions, condensed liquids, solidified gels, and insoluble fibrils
WEBINAR 2015-05-01 The Alzheimer's field has had its share of clinical trial flops. Now there's a push to learn from past failures. Computational scientists in pharmaceutical companies are guiding clinical trial design by first putting drug candidates through thei
WEBINAR 2015-01-30 To sate the brain’s voracious hunger for energy, thousands of capillaries deliver blood and oxygen to every sulcus and gyrus, and the white and gray matter in between. Herein lies a problem. The delicate cells of the brain must be protected from the flots
WEBINAR 2014-07-02 In the July 2 Science Translational Medicine, an international group of scientists reported how TREM2 missense mutations linked to neurodegenerative diseases impair the protein's function. The mutations prevent TREM2 from reaching the cellular surfac
WEBINAR 2014-04-13 Researchers rely on transgenic mice to model Alzheimer's disease, but these models are far from perfect. Some can only be maintained on specific genetic backgrounds, some die young or have surprising phenotypes when crossed with other mouse lines, an
WEBINAR 2013-12-06 Whether it’s a Bach concerto, Fermat's last theorem, or simply remembering the way home from the grocery store, cognition comes at a price. The brain depends on an elaborate network of blood vessels to feed its voracious appetite for oxygen and gluco
WEBINAR 2013-06-17 Our Webinar on 17 June 2013 covered the latest research and future directions on blood-based biomarkers discussed at a recent Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation/Alzheimer’s Association conference. Sid O’Bryant, Texas Tech University, Lubbock; Samantha
WEBINAR 2013-06-04 See Q&A with panelists below In the April 25 Cell, Valur Emilsson at the Icelandic Heart Association and Eric Schadt at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, report that they have identified molecular networks that are perturbed in Alzhei