Dopamine deficiency found to drive memory impairment in Alzheimer's disease
Why do memories fade in Alzheimer's disease—and can they be restored? University of California, Irvine researchers have uncovered a key mechanism underlying memory loss, showing for the first time that dopamine dysfunction in the entorhinal cortex, a critical memory-related brain region, contributes
ORIGINAL SOURCE →via Medical Xpress
ADVERTISEMENT
⚡ STAY AHEAD
Events like this, convergence-verified across 689 sources, land in your inbox every Sunday. Free.
GET THE SUNDAY BRIEFING →RELATED · health
- [HEALTH] Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices Regarding Arboviruses at a Human-Wildlife Interface: A Cross-Sectional Study in and
- [HEALTH] How to shore up trust during the "cold-period" between pandemics - closing the public trust gap in pandemic preparedness
- [HEALTH] Trk1 potassium transport is crucial for effective Candidozyma auris skin colonization.
- [HEALTH] [A rapid visual detection method for porcine circovirus type 4 based on enzymatic recombinase amplification and CRISPR/E
- [HEALTH] Working outside the home protected mental health for older adults during the pandemic, finds study
- [HEALTH] How a gentler stem cell transplant may move type 1 diabetes treatment closer