Alzheimer's Health Clinics Decatur AL

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Andrew Wilkerson
801 Church St Ne Ste 1
Decatur, AL
Specialty
Psychiatry, Alzheimer's Specialist

Home Health Group Decatur
(256) 350-4182
801 Church Street, Suite 5
Decatur, AL
Specialty
Home Health Agencies

Deanna Armstrong
(256) 355-4461
801 Church St Ne Ste 1
Decatur, AL
Specialty
Psychiatry, Alzheimer's Specialist

Paul Fredette
2205 Beltline Rd Sw
Decatur, AL
Specialty
Psychiatry, Alzheimer's Specialist

Robert Hellard
(256) 306-4023
1615 Kathy Ln Sw
Decatur, AL
Specialty
Psychiatry, Alzheimer's Specialist

Sunbridge Care & Rehab - Decat
(256) 355-6911
1350 Fourteenth Avenue Southeast
Decatur, AL
Specialty
Skilled Nursing Facilities

Morgan County Health Department
(256) 353-7021
201 Gordon Drive Suite 107
Decatur, AL
Specialty
Home Health Agencies

Hospice Of The Valley, Inc
(256) 974-5585
216 Johnson Street Southeast
Decatur, AL
Specialty
Hospices

Nikki Brannon
2205 Beltline Rd Sw
Decatur, AL
Specialty
Psychiatry, Alzheimer's Specialist

William Huddleston
(256) 353-9433
Po Box 2221
Decatur, AL
Specialty
Psychiatry, Alzheimer's Specialist

Sniff Out Alzheimer�s

Provided by: 

By Vicki Gerson

Can you identify these scents in a scratch-and-sniff test: banana, onion, soap, cinnamon, lemon, black pepper, smoke, paint thinner, pineapple, gasoline, rose, and chocolate? If so, this simple test may one day detect Alzheimer’s disease. Researchers at Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, studied about 600 adults, with an average age of 80, who showed no sign of cognitive impairment at the start of the study. Participants were asked to identify each of the above odors from one of four scents. Retested once a year for up to five years, participants also underwent a clinical evaluation that included a neurological examination and testing of their cognitive function. Over that five-year period, 30 percent developed mild cognitive impairment. The likelihood of impairment increased as the ability to identify odors decreased; those who scored below average on the smell test were 50 percent more likely to have developed impairment than those who scored above average. When researchers adjusted for smoking and a history of strokes—both of which can impair odor identification—the results still held. The researchers concluded that a decline in smell may indicate an early stage of Alzheimer’s and that this scent test may be helpful in detecting the disease.

Author: Vicki Gerson

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