Wednesday, March 19, 2008

RESEARCHERS FIND ONE IN SIX WOMEN, ONE IN TEN MEN AT RISK FOR ALZHEIMERS DISEASE IN THEIR LIFETIME

clipped from www.bu.edu
Researchers from Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) have estimated that one in six women are at risk for developing Alzheimer’s disease (AD) in their lifetime, while the risk for men is one in ten. These findings were released today by the Alzheimer’s Association in their publication 2008 Alzheimer’s Disease: Facts and Figures.

Stroke and dementia are the most widely feared age-related neurological diseases, and are also the only neurological disorders listed in the ten leading causes of disease burden.

The researchers followed 2,794 participants of the Framingham Heart Study for 29 years who were without dementia. They found 400 cases of dementia of all types and 292 cases of AD. They estimated the lifetime risk of any dementia at more than one in five for women, and one in seven for men.

According to the researchers, the greater lifetime expectancy for women translates into a greater lifetime risk of several diseases.
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