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Novembr 2022

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We want to express our gratitude for your support and participation with the Mesulam Center for Cognitive Neurology and Alzheimer's Disease. We are grateful for your commitment to our research.


We want you to know that it is because of your commitment that our work continues as we aim to provide the best possible treatment, support and care for those living with dementia and their families.


We wish you joy and peace this holiday season!


Below are some resources for this holiday season:

Despite volunteering and working out at the gym several days each week, socializing frequently with friends and family, reading all manner of books and doing daily crossword puzzles, 85-year-old Carol Siegler is restless. “I’m bored. I feel like a Corvette being used as a grocery cart,” said Siegler, who lives in the Chicago suburb of Palatine.


Siegler is a cognitive “SuperAger,” possessing a brain as sharp as people 20 to 30 years younger. She is part of an elite group enrolled in the Northwestern SuperAging Research Program, which has been studying the elderly with superior memories for 14 years. The program is part of the Mesulam Center for Cognitive Neurology and Alzheimer’s Disease at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago.

Read the Full Article

Additionally, Dr. Emily Rogalsksi, Associate Director of the Mesulam Center for Cognitive Neurology and Alzheimer's Disease at Northwestern University, appeared on the November 28 edition of CNN This Morning to discuss the Northwestern SuperAging Research Program.

Watch the Interview

The Mesulam Center would like to thank all Mesulam Center faculty, staff, and community partners, for their participation in community engagement events this year. We participated in 37 local educational community events and 31 meetings with community organizations. These efforts reached 1,155 community members and included senior health fairs, community resource fairs, memory cafés (in-person and virtual), dementia friends’ presentations, brain health and fitness programs, Alzheimer's Disease community forums, farmers markets, and lunch and listen programs to learn from community members. 


A special thank you to Mesulam Center members: Maureen Daly, Janessa Engelmeyer, Allison Lapins, Malik Nassan, and Kate O’Neil for being a part of our community engagement efforts.  


We would also like to thank our amazing community partners: South Loop Village, Rosenwald Court Senior Apartments, Oakwood Shores Senior Apartments, Senior Suites Central Station, First District Chicago Police Department Senior Sub Committee, Hall Branch Chicago Public Library, Dementia Friendly Washington Heights, Woodson Regional Chicago Public Library, Far South Chicago Coalition, Southeast Chicago Commission, 23rd place and Southbridge, Northwestern Memorial Hospital, SHARE Network, and DISCO. We appreciate your partnership in bringing equity of access to and trust in the advancement of medical science and raising dementia awareness and knowledge in Chicago communities.  


Wishing you and your families a happy holiday season!  

Phyllis Timpo, Nicole Hunt, Darby Morhardt, and Emily Rogalski

Learn More About Our Community Partnerships

Upcoming Events with Community Partners

South Loop Memory Café: Happy Birthday Dr. King

January 12, 3:00 - 4:00 PM


The South Loop Village Memory Café is a free monthly social gathering for persons living with dementia and their family, friends, and care partners. Meetings are in-person at the Second Presbyterian Church in Fellowship Hall. They are hosted every second Thursday of the month. 

South Loop Virtual Memory Café: Happy Birthday Dr. King

January 24, 2:00 - 3:00 PM


Join the South Loop Village and the Mesulam Center for the monthly Virtual Memory Café. These free virtual social gathering are for persons living with dementia and their family, friends, and care partners. Meetings are held via Zoom every fourth Tuesday of the month. RSVP here

News & Announcements

Experimental Drug Slows Alzheimer’s But Can It Make a Real Difference?

An experimental Alzheimer’s drug modestly slowed the brain disease’s inevitable worsening — but the anxiously awaited new data leaves unclear how much difference that might make in people’s lives. Ian Grant, MD, joined Chicago Tonight to discuss Alzheimer's Disease and the potential implications of Lecanemab.

What is a Neuropsychologist?

Sandra Weintraub, PhD, Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Psychology, and Neurology, recently published an article in Brain & Life, a publication of the American Academy of Neurology, explaining the roles and duties of a neuropsychologist. 

SuperAgers: QED with Dr. B

Cognitive decline is a common worry of aging people. But researchers like Dr. Emily Rogalski are studying a group of humans called “SuperAgers” who have excellent cognitive skills past the age of 80. She explains how her lab is seeking to better understand what may help people to be SuperAgers.

Feinberg SuperAger program examines exceptional cognitive aging

Internationally, the population of older people is the largest it has ever been. Cases of aging-related diseases grow in tandem with this trend, but until recently, research on them has primarily focused on dementia. But an initiative from the Mesulam Center for Cognitive Neurology and Alzheimer’s Disease at the Feinberg School of Medicine is taking the opposite approach. The program studies “SuperAgers,” or those with exceptional cognitive ability at over 80 years old who perform at least as well as their 50- to 60-year-old counterparts.

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Are you a Mesulam Center research participant? Are you interested in sharing your story? Consider joining our team of research advocates.

Become a Research Advocate

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