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Home » Rethinking The Link Between Alzheimer’s And Aging: Courtney Glavis-Bloom (Transcript)

Rethinking The Link Between Alzheimer’s And Aging: Courtney Glavis-Bloom (Transcript)

Read here the full transcript of neuroscientist Courtney Glavis-Bloom’s talk titled “Rethinking The Link Between Alzheimer’s And Aging” at TEDxSanDiego 2024 conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

A Personal Experience with Alzheimer’s

Late one night, when I was in high school here in San Diego, on the other end of the line was the Houston Police Department. They were calling to let us know that my grandfather had dropped my grandmother off at a pizza restaurant at three o’clock in the morning. He did this because he didn’t recognize her, and it was his method of removing a stranger from his house. But the real underlying reason is because he had Alzheimer’s disease.

Alzheimer’s is so prevalent that it’s likely everyone has been impacted in one way or another: as a friend, a caregiver, a family member. Scientists have spent decades studying Alzheimer’s disease, but there still isn’t a cure. The limited options that exist for treatment help some symptoms, just a small bit, and only temporarily.

This is disappointing for sure. But it’s not all that surprising, given that we still do not understand the biggest risk factor for getting Alzheimer’s disease in the first place: aging. It’s time for a new approach.

A New Approach to Alzheimer’s Research

One that prioritizes an understanding of why aging is the single most significant risk factor for getting Alzheimer’s disease. An approach that recognizes that without a comprehensive understanding of normal, healthy aging, curing the diseases that arise because of it will remain elusive. As a neuroscientist at the Salk Institute, my colleagues and I have adopted this approach. Critical to our work is the fact that aging is inevitable.

It happens to everyone. But thankfully, cognitive decline doesn’t. And so before we can solve Alzheimer’s disease, we must first ask what biological differences determine whether someone ages with or without cognitive decline.