Pages that link to "Q36582769"
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The following pages link to Cardiac risk factors and potential treatments in Alzheimer's disease (Q36582769):
Displaying 18 items.
- Cardiovascular Risk Factors for Alzheimer's Disease (Q22242643) (← links)
- Reduced clinical and postmortem measures of cardiac pathology in subjects with advanced Alzheimer's Disease (Q33803397) (← links)
- Cardiovascular risk and memory in non-demented elderly women. (Q33978314) (← links)
- Neuroprotective effects of garlic a review (Q34780386) (← links)
- Hypertension is associated with cognitive decline in elderly people at high risk for dementia (Q35577311) (← links)
- Cholesterol and LDL relate to neuritic plaques and to APOE4 presence but not to neurofibrillary tangles (Q35700985) (← links)
- Feasibility Study: Comparison of Frontal Cortex Needle Core Versus Open Biopsy for Detection of Characteristic Proteinopathies of Neurodegenerative Diseases (Q35977445) (← links)
- Arizona Study of Aging and Neurodegenerative Disorders and Brain and Body Donation Program (Q36121377) (← links)
- Immunophenotypes in the circulation of patients with mild cognitive impairment (Q36312711) (← links)
- Cardiovascular risk factors promote brain hypoperfusion leading to cognitive decline and dementia (Q36455581) (← links)
- The impact of nutrition on cognition in the elderly. (Q36753395) (← links)
- Cognition in non-demented diabetic older adults (Q36859533) (← links)
- Late-Life Vascular Risk Factors and Alzheimer Disease Neuropathology in Individuals with Normal Cognition (Q39497338) (← links)
- Cardiovascular dementia - a different perspective (Q40361355) (← links)
- Vascular risk factors and cognitive functions in nondemented elderly individuals (Q45393858) (← links)
- High dietary and plasma levels of the omega-3 fatty acid docosahexaenoic acid are associated with decreased dementia risk: the Rancho Bernardo study (Q46941970) (← links)
- Drug-induced cognitive impairment: Effect of cardiovascular agents (Q89329482) (← links)
- Associations Between Midlife (but Not Late-Life) Elevated Coronary Heart Disease Risk and Lower Cognitive Performance: Results From the Framingham Offspring Study (Q90428980) (← links)