Would you reduce your screen time if you knew it might lead to dementia, cognitive impairment, or mental illness? Research ...
New research suggests that the strength and timing of the body’s internal clock may be closely tied to dementia risk.
Research links disrupted biological rhythms to dementia risk, but sleep length alone may not be the key factor.
The results of a recent study suggest that people with a weaker or more irregular body clock, also known as circadian rhythm, may have a higher risk of developing dementia.
A new study found that fixing energy balance in the brain reversed symptoms of advanced Alzheimer’s in mice. Researchers used a drug (P7C3-A20) to ...
A major study in 2025 linked a poor body clock to a high risk of developing dementia ...
Weakened and fragmented circadian rhythms may be associated with an increased risk of dementia in the elderly. This was ...
Leaked specs suggest AMD’s Ryzen AI MAX 400 "Gorgon Halo" refresh will bring higher CPU and GPU clocks with faster memory ...
Elevated dementia risks among older adults were associated with weaker and more fragmented circadian rest-activity rhythms ...
Researchers monitored the activity of around 2,000 adults for three years. A new study from the American Academy of Neurology ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results