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Findings particularly for behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia
The authors say that four common risk prediction tools have limited clinical utility for 10-year risk assessment.
The reduction in risk was greatest for those with a history of ischemic heart disease or stroke.
The prediction was feasible across time frames using certain clinical features.
Being divorced or single increases the risk for dementia.
However, sleep-maintenance insomnia is tied to reduced dementia risk.
The risk score model yielded almost 100% prediction accuracy of 13-year dementia risk.
Those with a family history or higher self-perceived risk are more likely to participate.
People living with dementia are more likely to have a registered care partner with shared access to a patient portal.
Over 16 years, adults older than 50 years with HIV have almost twice the risk for developing dementia versus those without HIV.