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Charles DeCarli

Researcher at University of California, Davis

Publications -  721
Citations -  77364

Charles DeCarli is an academic researcher from University of California, Davis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dementia & Hyperintensity. The author has an hindex of 125, co-authored 614 publications receiving 65820 citations. Previous affiliations of Charles DeCarli include University of Southern California & French Institute of Health and Medical Research.

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Plasma metabolites associated with cognitive function across race/ethnicities affirming the importance of healthy nutrition

TL;DR: Several diet-related metabolites were associated with global cognitive function across studies with different race/ethnicities and Mendelian Randomization analyses provided weak evidence for a potential causal effect of ribitol on cognitive function and bi-directional effects of cognitive performance on diet.
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The national alzheimer's coordinating center mri database

TL;DR: The hypothesis that SNAP patients are characterized by a different cortical and subcortical involvement relative to A+N due to different underlying pathologic changes is supported.
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Subclinical left ventricular systolic dysfunction and incident stroke in the elderly: long-term findings from Cardiovascular Abnormalities and Brain Lesions.

TL;DR: LV GLS was a strong independent predictor of ischaemic stroke in a predominantly elderly stroke-free cohort and provide insights into the brain-heart interaction and may help improve stroke primary prevention strategies.
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Birth in a high infant mortality state: race and risk of dementia

TL;DR: The use of CSF and PET biomarkers may decrease the clinical-pathological diagnostic mismatch for AD, and the higher mismatch in other forms indicates the need for more neuropathologically based biomarkers.
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Discordance for hippocampal atrophy and amyloid burden in amnestic mild cognitive impairment may identify distinct subgroups of patients

TL;DR: P3-081 CHANGES in the VETERANS AFFAIRs SAINT LOUIS UNIVERSITY MENTAL STATUS (SLUMS) EXAM SCORES over 7.5 years’ FOLLOW-UP and RELATED OUTCOMes: the INFLUENCE of Reversible CoGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT and Correction of Sensory Loss.