For immediate release
Newswise — Naples, FL. Mild cognitive impairment (MCI), an early sign of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), occurs in the brain, but one tactic that may counter it involves the stomach. That is the focus of a special report, available free from MCI911.com, an information service devoted to halting MCI, announced CEO Leslie Norins, MD, PhD.
Titled “12 Surprising Reasons Ketones Deserve Diet Consideration in Mild Cognitive Impairment,” its author is Mary T. Newport, MD, a world authority on the use of dietary ketones as aids to cognition. Dr. Newport is also an advisor to MCI911.com.
After decades as a neonatal specialist, Dr. Newport was forced to consider brain ageing when her own husband, the manager of her practice, began showing signs of decreasing cognition. Sadly, there is no accepted treatment for MCI or AD, which is…