Researchers from the Columbia University Department of Neurology discovered a genetic variant that may reduce the odds of developing Alzheimer’s disease by up to 70%.
James Noble, MD, MS, Associate Professor of Neurology in the Taub Institute and the Sergievsky Center at CUMC discusses his diverse body of work and the motivation behind his passion projects.
Lawrence S. Honig, MD, PhD, Professor of Neurology at CUMC, comments on the suggestion that some people may have developed Alzheimer's disease after receiving growth hormones
The Alzheimer’s epidemic no one is talking about. That’s where the work of Jennifer J. Manly, PhD, a professor of neuropsychology at Columbia University Irving Medical Center, comes in.
Dr. Mitch Elkind couldn’t sleep. His mind was in overdrive, still cycling through reports he’d read about the spread of coronavirus in China and projecting what it might mean in the United States.
Education may reduce the risk of cognitive decline associated with the APOE e4 gene—the biggest genetic risk factor for late-onset Alzheimer’s disease—in older non-Hispanic black people.