Latest Discoveries In Alzheimer's Disease Therapy To Be Presented
05 Mar 2006
The world's leading physicians and scientists in the fields of Alzheimer's disease treatment and dementia research will participate in the 9th International Geneva/Springfield Symposium on the Advances in Alzheimer Therapy. The conference will be held April 19-22 at the International Conference Center in Geneva, Switzerland. They will highlight the latest discoveries in the treatment of dementia and results of the most recent clinical trials using drug, cellular and gene therapies. More than 100 sessions will be presented by 125 speakers during the four-day symposium. Nearly 800 specialists are expected to attend the international gathering. Included in those presentations will be historical data reflecting the progress of the treatment of Alzheimer's disease with cholinesterase inhibitors over the past 20 years; the results of three large clinical trials utilizing cholinesterase inhibitors in at-risk patients; and recommendations for usage of vaccination against beta-amyloid aggregation, the accumulation of toxins in the brain that destroys nerves which can lead to Alzheimer's disease. Dr. Paul Coleman, neuroscientist at the Center for Aging and Developmental Biology in Rochester, New York, will give the keynote address entitled The Impact of Science on Future Alzheimer Disease Diagnosis. The symposium was established by Dr. Ezio Giacobini, Ph.D., professor of rehabilitation and geriatrics at the University of Geneva Medical School in Switzerland and professor emeritus of the Southern Illinois University School of Medicine in Springfield, Ill., USA. Giacobini organized this year's conference with Dr. Jean-Pierre Michel, professor and chair of rehabilitation and geriatrics at the University of Geneva Medical School in Switzerland.
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