advertisement

Sunday, November 23, 2008
Brain & Behavior Center
Diseases & Conditions

Allergy & Asthma

Bones, Joints & Muscles

Brain & Behavior

Cancer

Diabetes

Digestive Disorders

Eye & Vision

Heart

Infectious Diseases

Pain

Respiratory Disorders

Sexual & Reproductive Health

Sleep

Health Rankings

Best Hospitals
What is the best hospital for you?

Best Health Plans
Where does your plan rank?

Tools

Find a Hospital
Search over 6,000 hospitals

Find a Therapist
by Psychology Today
Search for a licensed mental health professional near you.

Heart Risk Calculator
Are you at risk for a heart attack?

BMI Calculator
Figure out your body-mass index.

Merriam-Webster

Medical Dictionary

Look up a term:

 
Latest News

No more winter blues
Drug approved to prevent seasonal affective disorder

Alzheimer's disease.
Physical activity may stave off Alzheimer's

Getting satisfaction
What could be better than happiness?

More about Neurological Disorders
More about Mental Health

Brain & Behavior
(Illustration by Rod Little for USN&WR)
Diseases & Conditions
Alzheimer's Disease

This progressive disease damages nerve cells in parts of the brain involved in memory, learning, language, and reasoning. In early stages, short-term memory begins to fail. Over time, functions such as long-term memory, language, and judgment decline. More...

Patient information from the Cleveland Clinic
AboutPreventionSymptomsTestsTreatmentManaging
Anxiety

Anxiety disorders are characterized by recurrent symptoms--such as intense fear, worry, dizziness, and palpitations--that interfere with normal functioning, continue in the absence of obvious stresses, or are excessive reactions to those stresses. More...

For Johns Hopkins patient information
AboutSymptomsTreatmentManaging
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder

ADHD is characterized by developmentally inappropriate levels of inattention, hyperactivity, and impulsivity and affects 3 percent to 5 percent of all school-age children in the United States--or at least one child in every classroom. More...

Patient information from the Cleveland Clinic
AboutSymptomsTestsTreatmentManaging
Brain Tumor

Most brain tumors in children are primary tumors, meaning they arise in the brain. In adults, most are metastatic or secondary tumors, meaning the cancer has spread to the brain from the breast, lung, or other part of the body. Nearly 1 in 4 people with cancer will get a secondary brain tumor. More...

Patient information from the Cleveland Clinic
AboutSymptomsTestsTreatmentManaging
Depression

Everyone feels sad at times, inexplicably tearful, or just plain down. But when these feelings persist, affecting the way one eats and sleeps, feels about oneself, and thinks about family, friends, and work or school, they may be symptoms of a clinical illness. More...

AboutPreventionSymptomsTestsTreatmentManaging
Eating Disorders

Besides anorexia and bulimia, disordered eating behaviors include binge eating; over-exercising; chronic dieting; and the abuse of diet pills, laxatives, enemas, or diuretics. Learn how to recognize and treat them from the experts at Duke Medicine. More...

Patient information from Duke Medicine
AboutPreventionSymptomsTestsTreatment
Headache

It's the most common reason people skip work and school. Headache pain results when nerves of the blood vessels and head muscles are activated and send pain signals to the brain, though it's not clear why these signals are activated in the first place. Especially in the case of migraines, they tend to run in families. More...

Patient information from the Cleveland Clinic
AboutSymptomsTestsTreatment
Memory Loss

Memory loss ranges from age-associated memory impairment, or the normal amount of forgetfulness that is expected with age, to dementias such as Pick's disease that profoundly affect a person's ability to function. More...

For Johns Hopkins patient information
Multiple Sclerosis

There is no cure for MS, which interrupts the signals between brain and body as the fatty substance insulating the nerves deteriorates. But thanks to effective treatments, about half of people with MS are still able to walk unassisted 15 years after they have been diagnosed. More...

Patient information from the Cleveland Clinic
AboutSymptomsTestsTreatmentManaging
Parkinson's Disease

There is no cure for Parkinson's disease. But a number of medications can ease the characteristic tremor and rigidity, and improve a patient's quality of life. In some patients, surgery to implant a device known as a deep brain stimulator is the treatment of choice when drugs have failed or side effects are intolerable. More...

Stanford Hospital and Clinics
AboutSymptomsTestsTreatmentManaging
Stroke

Medicine has made great strides in diagnosing and treating stroke, in which a blood vessel carrying oxygen and other nutrients to the brain becomes blocked or suddenly bursts. As a result, the death rate has dropped even as the number of strokes has risen. More...

Stanford Hospital and Clinics
AboutPreventionSymptomsTestsTreatmentManaging
Features

Weight control
How to lose weight and how to keep it off

Fixing your brain
When pills fail, electrical implants can mend brains damaged by Parkinson's, stroke, and depression.

A very precious gift of time
Alzheimer's patients, with no cure in sight, still benefit from an early diagnosis.

Vanishing minds
New research is helping Alzheimer's patients cope—and hope.


Copyright © 2007 U.S.News & World Report, L.P. All rights reserved.

Use of this Web site constitutes acceptance of our Terms and Conditions of Use and Privacy Policy.

advertisement

advertisement

advertisement