Alzheimer disease, Degenerative brain disorder. It occurs in mid-to-late adult life, destroying neurons and connections in the cerebral cortex and resulting in significant loss of brain mass. Three stages of the disease are recognized: preclinical, mild cognitive impairment, and Alzheimer dementia, which is the most common form of dementia among older persons. Some 35.6 million people worldwide were living with dementia in 2010. Alzheimer disease progresses from short-term memory impairment to further memory loss; deterioration of language, perceptual, and motor skills; mood instability; and, in advanced stages, unresponsiveness, with loss of mobility and control of body functions. Death ensues after a disease course lasting 2–20 years. Originally described in 1906 by the German neuropathologist Alois Alzheimer (1864–1915) with reference to a 55-year-old person and regarded as a presenile dementia, Alzheimer disease is now recognized as accounting for much of the senile dementia once thought normal with aging. The 10% of cases that begin before age 60 appear to result from an inherited mutation. Early detection is based on the presence of biomarkers (physiological changes specific to or indicative of a disease) and on diagnostic imaging, with visualization of neuritic plaques and neurofibrillary tangles in the brain providing evidence of the disease. No cure has been found. Most treatment targets the depression, behavioral problems, and sleeplessness that often accompany the disease.
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