Alzheimer’s disease Diagnosis and Symptoms


Alzheimer’s disease is that the commonest type of dementia, it is a serious brain disorder and it impacts daily living through memory loss and cognitive changes. Although not all memory loss indicates Alzheimer’s disease, one in ten people over 65 years of age, and over half of those over 85 have Alzheimer’s illness. There is no single test that can show whether a person has Alzheimer's. While physicians can almost always determine if a person has dementia, it may be difficult to determine the exact cause. Diagnosing Alzheimer's requires careful medical evaluation, including medical history, mental status testing, physical and neurological exam, blood tests and brain imaging. Symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease usually develop slowly and gradually worsen over time, progressing from mild forgetfulness to widespread brain impairment. Chemical and structural changes within brain slowly destroy the ability to create, remember, learn, reason, and relate to others. As critical cells die, drastic personality loss occurs and body systems fail.



 


    Related Conference of Alzheimer’s disease Diagnosis and Symptoms

    February 16-17, 2026

    6th Annual Congress on Mental Health

    Paris, France
    February 16-16, 2026

    43rd Global Psychiatry and Mental Health Conference

    Paris, France
    March 09-10, 2026

    7th Annual Congress on Psychiatry

    Singapore City, Singapore
    March 23-24, 2026

    4th World Congress on Psychiatry

    Tokyo, Japan
    April 13-14, 2026

    8th International Congress on Mental Health

    Tokyo, Japan
    April 20-21, 2026

    33rd World Psychiatrists and Psychologists Meet

    Rome, Italy
    May 27-28, 2026

    8th European Autism Congress

    Paris, France
    June 01-02, 2026

    11th International Conference on Addiction Therapy

    Zurich, Switzerland

    Alzheimer’s disease Diagnosis and Symptoms Conference Speakers

      Recommended Sessions

      Related Journals

      Are you interested in