RT Eric Topol: The cancer-Alzheimer's paradox, an inverse correlation, with an unexplained mechanism "The risk of Alzheimer’s disease in patients wit...
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A Nature article highlights the cancer-Alzheimer's paradox: people with cancer have a significantly reduced risk of Alzheimer's disease, and those with Alzheimer's have half the risk of developing cancer. The biological mechanism behind this inverse correlation remains unexplained.
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A Nature article highlights the cancer-Alzheimer's paradox: people with cancer have a significantly reduced risk of Alzheimer's disease, and those with Alzheimer's have half the risk of developing cancer. The biological mechanism behind this inverse correlation remains unexplained.
A new study explores the inverse epidemiological relationship between cancer and Alzheimer's disease, suggesting that biological mechanisms protecting against one condition may increase susceptibility to the other, potentially opening new avenues for therapeutic research.
The "empathy paradox" explores how LTR readers associate the future with rightward space, while RTL readers link the past to the right. This spatial-cognitive difference may affect how temporal perspective and empathy are experienced across writing systems.
A Nature article highlights the cancer-Alzheimer's paradox: people with cancer have a significantly reduced risk of Alzheimer's disease, and those with Alzheimer's have half the risk of developing cancer. The biological mechanism behind this inverse correlation remains unexplained.