Neurocognitive Disorders
Cross-source consensus on Neurocognitive Disorders from 1 sources and 4 claims.
1 sources · 4 claims
How it works
Risks & contraindications
Highlighted claims
- Neurocognitive disorders affect cognitive function, memory, learning, and attention. — Microbes and ageing beyond the gut: the oral microbiome and frailty, sarcopenia and neurocognitive disorders in the elderly – a scoping review protocol
- Mild neurocognitive disorder affects approximately 10.5% of older adults without dementia, with incidence increasing markedly after age 70. — Microbes and ageing beyond the gut: the oral microbiome and frailty, sarcopenia and neurocognitive disorders in the elderly – a scoping review protocol
- Alzheimer's disease, the most prevalent form of major neurocognitive disorder, is irreversible and progressive, with a prevalence of 3–19% and an incidence of 8–58 per 1,000 person-years. — Microbes and ageing beyond the gut: the oral microbiome and frailty, sarcopenia and neurocognitive disorders in the elderly – a scoping review protocol
- Alzheimer's disease aetiology is multifactorial, encompassing genetic, neurobiological, environmental, and psychosocial factors. — Microbes and ageing beyond the gut: the oral microbiome and frailty, sarcopenia and neurocognitive disorders in the elderly – a scoping review protocol