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One or more keywords matched the following properties of Arvanitakis, Zoe
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overview Zoe Arvanitakis, MD, MS, is the Acting Chairperson of the Department of Neurological Sciences, at the Rush Medical College of Rush University. She is the Medical Director of the Rush Memory Clinic, at the Rush Alzheimer’s Disease Center. A Professor of Neurological Sciences, she is a board-certified neurologist (certified by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, with re-certification) and subspecialist in cognitive neurology and dementia, with fellowship training from the Mayo Clinic. She has more than two decades of clinical experience in cognitive clinical care, research, and education. The Rush Memory Clinic, under the leadership of Arvanitakis, provides expert subspecialty clinical care to improve the overall health and well-being of older adults with memory and cognitive-behavioral changes through expert diagnosis, care planning, and opportunities for research participation. Arvanitakis is recognized as an effective and energetic educator who teaches at the medical school and within Rush, as well as at national conferences and meetings, and has received an award from Rush for her excellence in mentoring. Arvanitakis is also an academic clinical neuroscientist with expertise in biomedical research, with a Master of Science (MS) in Clinical Research, and subspecialization in epidemiology. Arvanitakis is Principal Investigator of research grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), including investigator-initiated grants (R01s), and is Principal Investigator of clinical trials and co-investigator on several other NIH-funded and additional projects. Arvanitakis has published original research in peer-reviewed medical journals in the field of neurodegenerative, vascular, and metabolic cognitive impairment and dementia, including publications on the topics of Alzheimer’s disease and mechanisms of dementia. In addition to her many publications, Arvanitakis has also co-edited a medical textbook. Her collaborative research leverages clinical, laboratory, neuroimaging and other data, and human biospecimens, from several large, epidemiologic, longitudinal, clinical-pathologic cohort studies of aging at the Rush Alzheimer’s Disease Center. She serves on numerous national and international funding agency, scientific journal, and meeting abstract review panels. She is a member of the NIH Neurological, Aging and Musculoskeletal Epidemiology (NAME) study section. Arvanitakis is internationally recognized scientific speaker in the field of neurologic aging and dementia. She is a past chair of the Geriatric Neurology Section of the American Academy of Neurology (AAN), the largest professional organization of neurologists in the world. Arvanitakis is an elected Fellow of the American Academy of Neurology (FAAN) and an elected Fellow of the American Neurological Association (FANA). My Scopus ID is 6603251223. My NIH COMMONS name is ZARVANITAKIS.
One or more keywords matched the following items that are connected to Arvanitakis, Zoe
Item TypeName
Academic Article Relation of NSAIDs to incident AD, change in cognitive function, and AD pathology.
Academic Article Mixed pathology is more likely in black than white decedents with Alzheimer dementia.
Academic Article Diabetes mellitus and progression of rigidity and gait disturbance in older persons.
Academic Article Diabetes is related to cerebral infarction but not to AD pathology in older persons.
Academic Article Statins, incident Alzheimer disease, change in cognitive function, and neuropathology.
Academic Article Mixed brain pathologies account for most dementia cases in community-dwelling older persons.
Academic Article Neuropathology of older persons without cognitive impairment from two community-based studies.
Academic Article Physical activity, motor function, and white matter hyperintensity burden in healthy older adults.
Academic Article M. tuberculosis molecular variation in CNS infection: evidence for strain-dependent neurovirulence.
Academic Article Family history of dementia is a risk factor for Lewy body disease.
Academic Article Clinical trial efforts in Alzheimer disease: why test statins?
Academic Article Parkinsonian signs in subjects with mild cognitive impairment.
Academic Article Cognitive decline following incident and preexisting diabetes mellitus in a population sample.
Academic Article Late-life blood pressure association with cerebrovascular and Alzheimer disease pathology.
Award or Honor Receipt Palatucci Advocacy Leadership Forum: training neurologists worldwide in grassroots advocacy
Award or Honor Receipt "Women in Advanced Leadership Roles" program (competitive registration)
Academic Article Author response: Late-life blood pressure association with cerebrovascular and Alzheimer disease pathology.
Academic Article Association of Hemoglobin A1C With TDP-43 Pathology in Community-Based Elders.
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