It's not known why this happens. Having a close relative with motor neurone disease, or a related condition called ...
It's not known why this happens. Having a close relative with motor neurone disease, or a related condition called frontotemporal dementia, can sometimes mean you're more likely to get it.
Researchers discovered that nearly 70 per cent of suspected frontotemporal dementia patients ultimately did not have the disease in a study aimed at identifying factors that contribute to misdiagnosis ...
Motor neurone disease is an uncommon condition that mainly affects people in their 60s and 70s. The family of a boy living with motor neurone disease have said it was a "massive shock" for him to ...
Historically, frontotemporal lobar degeneration ... Furthermore, there is a strong link with motor neuron disease; 15% of patients with FTD develop amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).
My primary research focuses on two overlapping neurodegenerative disorders, Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD) and Motor Neurone Disease (MND). I am particularly interested in how dipeptide-repeats ...
Neuropeutics is collaborating with LifeArc on a small molecule therapy that reportedly lowered TDP-43 clumping in an animal ...
Alzheimer’s disease and frontotemporal dementia. Through a comparative analysis between Latin America and the USA, the research highlights brain health disparities driven by structural inequality.