Description

Book Synopsis
Essays examine not only the prominent role that biomedical and clinical researchers have played in defining Alzheimer disease, but the ways in which the perspectives of patients, their caregivers, and the broader public have shaped concepts.

Trade Review
The first sentence of this excellent book sums up both its content and the reason one should read it: 'it is ironic that the professional and popular discourse surrounding Alzheimer disease (AD), whose most dreadful feature is the obliteration of memory, proceeds with little awareness of its past.' And if Santayana's often-quoted statement about those who cannot remember the past is true, what does this mean for studies of dementia? This book attempts to answer the question and does so very successfully. -- A. M. Clarfield, M.D. New England Journal of Medicine This book will be an inspiration of greatest interest to anyone engaged in biological or social research in AD. Clinical Gerontologist This is an excellent book, both for the newcomer to the study of Alzheimer disease and to the seasoned reader and clinician. -- A. MacDonald Aging and Mental Health White has written the go-to or standard account of the Haitian Revolution's impact on the United States. Even more important, she has done so in a way that opens up rather than closes off new avenues of exploration. -- Matthew Hale H-Net Reviews 2011

Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments
List of Contributors
Part I: The Cases of Auguste D. And Johann F.
Chapter 1. Auguste D.: The History of Alois Alzheimer's First Case
Chapter 2. Johann F.: The Historical Relevance of the Case for the Concept of Alzheimer Disease
Part II: From Alzheimer to the Present
Chapter 3. Neurofibrillary Changes: The Hallmark of Alzheimer Disease
Chapter 4. Contributions of German Neuroscience to the Concept of Alzheimer Disease
Chapter 5. Beyond the Characteristic Plaques and Tangles: Mid-Twentieth-Century U.S. Psychiatry and the Fight Against Senility
Chapter 6. The Rediscover of Alzheimer Disease During the 1960s and 1970s
Chapter 7. The History of the Genetics of Alzheimer Disease
Part III: Alzheimer Disease as a Social and Cultural Entity
Chapter 8. Alzheimer Disease: Epistemological Lessons From History?
Chapter 9. Aging, Culture, and the Framing of Alzheimer Disease
Chapter 10. Narrative Practice and the Inner World of the Alzheimer Disease Experience
Part IV: Politics, Policy, and the Perspectives of the Caregiver and Patient
Chapter 11. The Role of the Concept of Alzheimer Disease in the Development of the Alzheimer's Association in the United States
Chapter 12. The History of the Alzheimer's Association: Future Public Policy Implications
Chapter 13. The Concept of Alzheimer Disease in a Hypercognitive Society
Part V: Progress and Its Problems
Chapter 14. Alzheimer Disease and the New Biology
Chapter 15. The Genetics of Alzheimer Disease: Some Future Implications
Chapter 16. History and the Future of Alzheimer Disease
Index

Concepts of Alzheimer Disease Biological Clinical

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A Hardback by Peter J. Whitehouse, Konrad Maurer, Jesse F. Ballenger

5 in stock


    View other formats and editions of Concepts of Alzheimer Disease Biological Clinical by Peter J. Whitehouse

    Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
    Publication Date: 07/03/2000
    ISBN13: 9780801862335, 978-0801862335
    ISBN10: 0801862337

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Essays examine not only the prominent role that biomedical and clinical researchers have played in defining Alzheimer disease, but the ways in which the perspectives of patients, their caregivers, and the broader public have shaped concepts.

    Trade Review
    The first sentence of this excellent book sums up both its content and the reason one should read it: 'it is ironic that the professional and popular discourse surrounding Alzheimer disease (AD), whose most dreadful feature is the obliteration of memory, proceeds with little awareness of its past.' And if Santayana's often-quoted statement about those who cannot remember the past is true, what does this mean for studies of dementia? This book attempts to answer the question and does so very successfully. -- A. M. Clarfield, M.D. New England Journal of Medicine This book will be an inspiration of greatest interest to anyone engaged in biological or social research in AD. Clinical Gerontologist This is an excellent book, both for the newcomer to the study of Alzheimer disease and to the seasoned reader and clinician. -- A. MacDonald Aging and Mental Health White has written the go-to or standard account of the Haitian Revolution's impact on the United States. Even more important, she has done so in a way that opens up rather than closes off new avenues of exploration. -- Matthew Hale H-Net Reviews 2011

    Table of Contents

    Preface
    Acknowledgments
    List of Contributors
    Part I: The Cases of Auguste D. And Johann F.
    Chapter 1. Auguste D.: The History of Alois Alzheimer's First Case
    Chapter 2. Johann F.: The Historical Relevance of the Case for the Concept of Alzheimer Disease
    Part II: From Alzheimer to the Present
    Chapter 3. Neurofibrillary Changes: The Hallmark of Alzheimer Disease
    Chapter 4. Contributions of German Neuroscience to the Concept of Alzheimer Disease
    Chapter 5. Beyond the Characteristic Plaques and Tangles: Mid-Twentieth-Century U.S. Psychiatry and the Fight Against Senility
    Chapter 6. The Rediscover of Alzheimer Disease During the 1960s and 1970s
    Chapter 7. The History of the Genetics of Alzheimer Disease
    Part III: Alzheimer Disease as a Social and Cultural Entity
    Chapter 8. Alzheimer Disease: Epistemological Lessons From History?
    Chapter 9. Aging, Culture, and the Framing of Alzheimer Disease
    Chapter 10. Narrative Practice and the Inner World of the Alzheimer Disease Experience
    Part IV: Politics, Policy, and the Perspectives of the Caregiver and Patient
    Chapter 11. The Role of the Concept of Alzheimer Disease in the Development of the Alzheimer's Association in the United States
    Chapter 12. The History of the Alzheimer's Association: Future Public Policy Implications
    Chapter 13. The Concept of Alzheimer Disease in a Hypercognitive Society
    Part V: Progress and Its Problems
    Chapter 14. Alzheimer Disease and the New Biology
    Chapter 15. The Genetics of Alzheimer Disease: Some Future Implications
    Chapter 16. History and the Future of Alzheimer Disease
    Index

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