Saturday, December 20, 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

    Teen depression may kill love life even in middle-age

    Teen depression may kill love life even in middle-age
    Negative emotions suffered when one was young can have a lasting grip on love relationships well into middle-age, new research says.

    Teen depression may kill love life even in middle-age

    Scientists rewrite code of life with 'alien' DNA

    Scientists rewrite code of life with 'alien' DNA
    In a major breakthrough that could re-write the history of life on earth, scientists have successfully added an alien pair of DNA "letters" (or bases) to create the first "semi-synthetic" bacterium.

    Scientists rewrite code of life with 'alien' DNA

    Now, a DNA tool to spot cancer

    Now, a DNA tool to spot cancer
    Detecting cancer could soon become a lot easier as scientists have used DNA to develop a tool that detects and reacts to chemical changes caused by cancer cells.

    Now, a DNA tool to spot cancer

    What you were waiting for! A device that detects pee in pool

    What you were waiting for! A device that detects pee in pool
    Those who have a habit of peeing in a swimming pool, beware. Here comes a device glows green the moment it detects traces of human waste in water.

    What you were waiting for! A device that detects pee in pool

    Do humans have spiders' genes?

    Do humans have spiders' genes?
    Not only the spiderman, even you may share certain genomic similarities with spiders, a study that for the first time sequenced the genome of a spider has revealed.

    Do humans have spiders' genes?

    Anger a better motivator for volunteers than sympathy?

    Anger a better motivator for volunteers than sympathy?
    Angry people do not always raise a ruckus; they may also bring about positive changes to society with a new study showing that anger may be more effective at motivating people to volunteer than other motives.

    Anger a better motivator for volunteers than sympathy?