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Before Alzheimer's disease (AD) clinical symptoms appear, there is a long period when changes in the brain occur. In this long asymptomatic period or preclinical phase, studies with populations at risk of developing AD have shown cognitive differences compared to control groups without such risk. There is a need for short, sensitive, easily administered, reproducible, non-expensive and independent of socio-demographic influences tests enabling the detection of pre-symptomatic variations in memory, when the memory decline is still within a normal range.
Study main hypothesis: When evaluated with high-demanding tests of memory and executive function, the cognitive performance of cognitive healthy people aged between 45 and 65 and, extensively, to a group of up to 75 years, will vary significantly depending on clinical, socio-demographic and genetic features
Full description
The purpose of Study 45-65 is to assess if:
An optional visit is offered to study participants that includes: cerebral magnetic resonance, vascular ultrasound and olfactory testing.
Enrollment
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Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Men and women, aged between 45 and 75 years
Spanish and/or Catalan speakers
Agreement with the study procedures and tests:
Close relative involvement for functional evaluation of the volunteer
Signature of informed consent
Exclusion criteria
2,743 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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