Las Vegas Review-Journal

Local medical scene advances

Center devoted to preventing Alzheimer’s

-

Thanks to the vision of Maria Shriver, Las Vegas is now the home to the nation’s first center focused specifical­ly on preventing Alzheimer’s in women. On June 18, The Women’s Alzheimer’s Movement Prevention Center at Cleveland Clinic opened downtown in the Cleveland Clinic Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health. Peer-reviewed research shows that it may be possible to prevent Alzheimer’s in up to one-third of patients. Prevention is important because there is no cure for the disease.

The center is a passion project of Ms. Shriver, who’s well-known as a journalist and the former first lady of California.

“Women and Alzheimer’s has been my jam, my passion, my mission, my Achilles’ heel,” she told the Review-journal’s Mary Hynes in an interview. “It’s what gets me up. It’s what drives me.”

Ms. Shriver’s interest in Alzheimer’s stems from when her late father, Sargent Shriver, was diagnosed with the condition in 2003. She became more interested after learning that two-thirds of Alzheimer’s patients are women. The convention­al wisdom is that women are more likely to get the disease because they live longer. That line of thinking isn’t convincing to Ms. Shriver, who founded The Women’s Alzheimer’s Movement.

“Women’s brains are different from men’s, and it’s still something we’re learning about,” said Jessica Caldwell, a neuropsych­ologist and the center’s director. Those biological difference­s are what make a center focused specifical­ly on women important.

“While Alzheimer’s disease impacts women disproport­ionately, today’s medical care models and research studies largely approach the disease that affects 5.8 million Americans as though it were the same for women and men,” Ms. Caldwell said. “Our program is the first to pair prevention strategies with a woman’s individual­ized risk to help women make tailored, lasting behavior changes that promote brain health and reduce risk.”

The center is ready to help women who have a family history of the disease or would like to minimize their risk. Ms. Caldwell will oversee a process that evaluates a woman’s individual risk level based on factors such as diet, stress, sleep and exercise. This informatio­n will allow the center to create personaliz­ed recommenda­tions for sustained change over the long term. Regular follow-up appointmen­ts will happen after that.

Funded primarily by philanthro­py, the center aims to help 380 women over the next three years. That’s an excellent start. Let’s hope this effort produces groundbrea­king strategies to help prevent this pernicious disease.

The center is ready to help women who have a family history of the disease or would like to minimize their risk.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States