Nearly 100 years ago, Alois Alzheimer described the clinicaland pathological characteristics of a 50-year-old woman withthe dementing illness that now bears his name.1 She had no familyhistory of dementia. It soon became established dogma that Alzheimer'sdisease was a rare, noninherited cause of presenile dementia.
The past 25 years have seen an astounding confluence of sevennew observations that have resulted in fundamental changes inour understanding of this important disease. First, Alzheimer'sdisease is by far the most common cause of dementia. Second,the major pathological component of the disease is the accumulationof a form . . . [Full Text of this Article]
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Dr. Bird is a professor of neurology, medicine, and psychiatry at the University of Washington and a research neurologist at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Seattle.
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