On the path to 2025: understanding the Alzheimer’s disease continuum
University of California, San Diego · Lou Ruvo Brain Institute · +17 more institutions
Abstract
Basic research advances in recent years have furthered our understanding of the natural history of Alzheimer's disease (AD). It is now recognized that pathophysiological changes begin many years prior to clinical manifestations of disease and the spectrum of AD spans from clinically asymptomatic to severely impaired. Defining AD purely by its clinical presentation is thus artificial and efforts have been made to recognize the disease based on both clinical and biomarker findings. Advances with biomarkers have also prompted a shift in how the disease is considered as a clinico-pathophysiological entity, with an increasing appreciation that AD should not only be viewed with discrete and defined clinical stages,…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 19.68
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 82
Authors
12Topics & keywords
- Disease
- Medicine
- Biomarker
- Natural history
- Asymptomatic
- Intensive care medicine
- Neuroscience
- Psychology