M
Miia Kivipelto
Researcher at Karolinska University Hospital
Publications - 516
Citations - 70761
Miia Kivipelto is an academic researcher from Karolinska University Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dementia & Population. The author has an hindex of 91, co-authored 447 publications receiving 58328 citations. Previous affiliations of Miia Kivipelto include National Institute for Health and Welfare & National Institutes of Health.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Experiences of Participation in a Multimodal Preventive Trial MIND-ADMINI Among Persons with Prodromal Alzheimer’s Disease: A Qualitative Study
TL;DR: The MIND-ADMINI intervention targeted persons with prodromal AD and built on the positive outcomes from the Finnish Geriatric Intervention Study to Prevent Cognitive Impairment and Disability (FINGER) trial.
Journal ArticleDOI
Grey matter and cognitive patterns in cognitive impaired subjects using CSF biomarker cut-offs.
Júlia Miralbell,Gabriela Spulber,Gabriela Spulber,Babak Hooshmand,Ariadna Besga,Maria Mataró,Angel Cedazo-Minguez,Miia Kivipelto,Miia Kivipelto,Lars-Olof Wahlund +9 more
TL;DR: The hypothesis that CSF t-t Tau or p-tau181 levels may be of direct value for the evaluation of disease severity is supported, as it shows an Alzheimer's disease-like pattern for both GM distribution and cognitive profile, compared to those with normal levels.
Book ChapterDOI
The Epidemiology and Prevention of Alzheimer’s Disease and Projected Burden of Disease
TL;DR: International collaboration is necessary to initiate future large-scale dementia prevention studies that are needed to formulate evidence-based preventive measures in cognitive decline and dementia.
Journal ArticleDOI
Diet and cognition: Baseline associations in the Finnish Geriatric Intervention Study to Prevent Cognitive Impairment and Disability (FINGER)
Jenni Lehtisalo,Jaana Lindström,Tiia Ngandu,Tiina Laatikainen,Hilkka Soininen,Timo E. Strandberg,Jaakko Tuomilehto,Miia Kivipelto +7 more
TL;DR: While biomarkers alone likely will not provide individual prediction information for development of symptomatic AD, they are a valuable tool in assessing risk for developing clinical symptoms and may reflect early changes in the spectrum of AD.
Journal ArticleDOI
Healthy ageing through internet counselling in the elderly (hatice): an ongoing randomised controlled trial
Edo Richard,Edo Richard,Francesca Mangialsche,Sandrine Andrieu,Mariagenese Barbera,Cathrien Beishuizen,Carol Brayne,Nicola Coley,Nicola Coley,Willem A. van Gool,Juliette Guillemont,Susan Jongstra,Eric P. Moll van Charante,Tiia Ngandu,Hilkka Soininen,Miia Kivipelto,Miia Kivipelto +16 more