Imagine walking into a room and realizing that the person smiling at you, the one you’ve shared a lifetime of dinners, holidays, and tears with, doesn’t spark a flicker of recognition. For the millions of families touched by Alzheimer’s disease (AD), this is their heartbreaking reality. It’s not just memory loss in general — it’s the moment when your loved one stops recognising you. It’s the fading away from memory, even when you’re alive and around. Alzheimer’s disease, the most common cause of dementia, slowly robs people of memory, independence, identity, and even their personality. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), over 55 million people live with dementia globally, and Alzheimer’s makes up around 60–70% of those cases. But what could possibly be the reason behind

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