The Economist -
9 Sep 2015 19:00

WHEN Auguste Deter (pictured) was admitted to hospital in 1901, her medical records described her helpless expression and problems remembering her husband's name. It was only after her death, in 1906, that an autopsy revealed a number of brain abnormalities. The doctor who discovered them was Aloysius Alzheimer and the two proteins he found in her brain are today thought to be an integral part of the disease named after him. These days Alzheimer's is recognised as a progressive neurological cond...
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