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Alberto Rábano

Researcher at Carlos III Health Institute

Publications -  107
Citations -  4928

Alberto Rábano is an academic researcher from Carlos III Health Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Dementia. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 86 publications receiving 3366 citations. Previous affiliations of Alberto Rábano include Spanish National Research Council.

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Neuronal tetraploidization in the cerebral cortex correlates with reduced cognition in mice and precedes and recapitulates Alzheimer's-associated neuropathology.

TL;DR: It is shown that age-associated dnNT occurs in both superficial and deep layers of the cerebral cortex of adult mice, a process that is blocked in the absence of E2F1, a known regulator of cell cycle progression.
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Residence, Clinical Features, and Genetic Risk Factors Associated with Symptoms of COVID-19 in a Cohort of Older People in Madrid.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored the risk factors of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 pandemic (COVID-19) in home-dwelling older people and its association with type of residence, cognitive deterioration, and neurodegenerative diseases.
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Identification of prefrontal cortex protein alterations in Alzheimer's disease.

TL;DR: High-throughput analysis of 706 molecules mostly implicated in cell-cell communication and cell signaling processes by using two antibody microarray platforms identified altered proteins in AD not common to other dementias like the E3 ubiquitin-protein ligase TOPORS, Layilin and MICB.
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Pattern of and risk factors for brain microbleeds in neurodegenerative dementia.

TL;DR: Brain microbleeds are associated with vascular burden and AD diagnosis in old patients with neurodegenerative dementia and more research is warranted regarding the mechanisms and potential clinical implications of these results.
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A New Antigen Retrieval Technique for Human Brain Tissue

TL;DR: A novel method to carry out immunohistochemical studies in free-floating human brain sections based on the use of citraconic acid, which has not been previously utilized in brain tissue although it has been employed in various other tissues.