Epidemiologic Aspects of Alzheimer's Disease
- 1 May 1989
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Aging and Health
- Vol. 1 (2), 139-149
- https://doi.org/10.1177/089826438900100201
Abstract
To date, the classical approach of epidemiology has been neither exhaustive nor particularly helpful in developing insights into the nature of Alzheimer's disease. The inability both to diagnose the disease and predict its clinical course hampers our ability to conduct adequate research on cause, prevention, clinical trials, and other treatment modalities as well as to select those key patients for whom greater efforts toward securing autopsies must be made. We are engaged in establishing an Alzheimer's Disease Patient Registry, to determine the data needed to embark on major etiologic and epidemiologic studies. Our studies of Alzheimer's disease in families and in forms of social and financial milieu are designed to develop humanitarian and potentially cost-effective approaches.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Trends in the Health of the Elderly PopulationAnnual Review of Public Health, 1987
- Alzheimer's DiseaseNew England Journal of Medicine, 1986
- Diseases and disorders of aging: An hypothesisJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1986
- Prospects for an ageing populationNature, 1985
- Head injury as a risk factor for Alzheimer's diseaseNeurology, 1985
- Clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer's diseaseNeurology, 1984
- Alzheimer's disease: A study of epidemiological aspectsAnnals of Neurology, 1984
- Does the Incidence of Age Psychosis Decrease?Neuropsychobiology, 1981
- Evidence for and against the transmissibility of Alzheimer diseaseNeurology, 1980
- Organic Brain Syndrome and AgingArchives of General Psychiatry, 1980