The signs the brain hides: how you can stop dementia in time
The brain changes underlying Alzheimer's disease begin to develop decades before memory and thinking are impaired, but until now early detection required expensive or invasive tests • A groundbreaking study published in The Lancet reveals…
Assessment
A non-invasive, affordable blood test could shift Alzheimer's from a disease diagnosed too late to one caught decades earlier. The stakes are immense: if validated, this could transform prevention trials and clinical care, letting people intervene before cognitive decline begins. Watch for replication studies and whether these protein markers become standard screening tools in routine checkups.
