RELATED LINKS
CHAPTER 1
What Is Alzheimer's Disease? (VIDEO)
The nerve cell is the hub for all of the activity that occurs in the brain, and the connections between nerve cells create a living, dynamic framework for everything that we see, hear, taste, smell, touch and experience. In Alzheimer's disease, beta amyloid proteins accumulate to form large plaques between nerve cells. Eventually, the amyloid deposits block off the nerve cells from their network and cause the cells to die.
Alzheimer's is not thought to be caused by amyloid alone. Experts say that the amyloid buildup has an accomplice in another compound that interferes with nerve cell function, neurofibrillary tangles.
cardiovascular heart Embryo birth fetus fetu brain blood pregnancy depression kidney cancer breast eye
theVisualMD Wishes to Thank our Scientific Collaborators:
- Rudolph E. Tanzi, PhD
Joseph P. and Rose F. Kennedy Professor of Neurology, Harvard Medical School Director, Genetics and Aging Research Unit, MassGeneral Institute for Neurodegenerative Disease Massachusetts General Hospital - Brigham and Women's Hospital, Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School
Reisa Sperling, MD - Stephen Salloway, MD, MS
Professor of Neurology and Psychiatry Alpert Medical School of Brown University - Bradley Hyman, MD, PhD
John B Penney Jr Professor of Neurology Harvard Medical School Director, Massachusetts Alzheimer Disease Research Center Massachusetts General Hospital - John H. Morrison, PhD
Dean of Basic Sciences and the Graduate School of Biological Sciences Professor, Department of Neuroscience, Director, Neurobiology of Aging Laboratories Mount Sinai School of Medicine - Brad Dickerson, MD
Harvard University - Ramon Figueroa, MD
Georgia Health Sciences Health System
