Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Walking speed may detect Alzheimer's risk

Darpan News Desk IANS, 26 Jul, 2014 07:58 AM
    How fast people walk and whether they have memory complaints can help predict dementia early, researchers have found.
     
    Alzheimer's disease is the most common type of dementia.
     
    The new test diagnoses motoric cognitive risk syndrome (MCR). Testing for the newly described syndrome relies on measuring "gait speeda (our manner of walking) and asking a few simple questions about a patient's cognitive abilities, both of which take just seconds.
     
    "Our assessment method could enable many more people to learn if they are at risk for dementia, since it avoids the need for complex testing and does not require that the test be administered by a neurologist," said Joe Verghese, a professor at Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University
     
    "All that is needed to assess MCR is a stopwatch and a few questions, so primary care physicians could easily incorporate it into examinations of their older patients," Verghese added.
     
    To test whether MCR predicts future dementia, the researchers focused on four of the 22 studies that tested a total of 4,812 people for MCR and then evaluated them annually over an average follow-up period of 12 years to see which ones developed dementia.
     
    Those who met the criteria for MCR were nearly twice as likely to develop dementia over the following 12 years compared with people who did not.
     
    The study, involving nearly 27,000 older adults on five continents, appeared online in the journal Neurology.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    High cholesterol can cause cancer

    High cholesterol can cause cancer
    Bad cholesterol has just become worse. Known to cause heart disease and hardening of the arteries, it has now been linked with a cell pathway that promotes cancer.

    High cholesterol can cause cancer

    Interruptions affect quality of work

    Interruptions affect quality of work
    Does your colleague call you out every two minutes just to see his/her picture during college days or a Facebook update even as you try to write an important report?

    Interruptions affect quality of work

    Parkinson's boosts creativity: Study

    Parkinson's boosts creativity: Study
    If you are in a creative profession, Parkinson's may be a blessing in disguise as researchers have found that patients of the nerve cells disease in the area of brain are more creative than their healthy peers.

    Parkinson's boosts creativity: Study

    How marijuana shrinks cancerous tumours

    How marijuana shrinks cancerous tumours
    Marijuana's success in shrinking tumours has remained a mystery till now. Researchers have now revealed the existence of previously unknown signalling platforms which are behind the drug's success in arresting tumour growth.

    How marijuana shrinks cancerous tumours

    How stress leads to weight gain among women

    How stress leads to weight gain among women
    The next time you order a pizza topped with extra cheese to bust your stress, think again!

    How stress leads to weight gain among women

    Naked sleepers most content in relationships: Survey

    Naked sleepers most content in relationships: Survey
     Wearing nothing between the sheets is the key to have a happy and robust relationship, a research reveals.

    Naked sleepers most content in relationships: Survey