Alzheimer – Between Science, Memory, and the Human Spirit examines Alzheimer’s disease as both a clinical condition and a profound human experience. Grounded in contemporary neuroscience, the book explores the biological mechanisms of memory loss while refusing to reduce the illness to statistics or isolated symptoms.
Lírio Amaro Damary guides the reader through the space where neurology meets ethics, and where scientific precision encounters the lived reality of patients, families, and caregivers. Biomarkers, genetics, neurodegeneration, and emerging therapies are presented alongside reflections on identity, dignity, and the persistence of emotional life even as memory fades.
Rather than treating Alzheimer’s solely as a narrative of loss, this work investigates what endures when remembrance dissolves. It reveals care as an act of sustained presence, and medicine as a practice that requires not only technology, but attention, responsibility, and compassion.
Written with conceptual rigor and human sensitivity, the book speaks to physicians, health professionals, students, caregivers, and reflective readers seeking a deeper understanding of the disease. Alzheimer’s becomes here not only a neurological challenge, but a lens through which we rethink consciousness, personhood, and the meaning of care when cure is no longer possible.
| Number of Pages | 305 |
| Edition | 2 (2025) |
| Format | A5 (148x210) |
| Binding | Paperback with Flaps |
| Color | Black and White |
| Paper Type | Cream |
| Language | English |
Do you have complaints about this book? Send an email to [email protected]
Click Login to leave your comment on the book.