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SciCrunch Registry is a curated repository of scientific resources, with a focus on biomedical resources, including tools, databases, and core facilities - visit SciCrunch to register your resource.
Project aimed at making neuroimaging data sets of brain freely available to scientific community. By compiling and freely distributing neuroimaging data sets, future discoveries in basic and clinical neuroscience are facilitated.
Proper citation: Open Access Series of Imaging Studies (RRID:SCR_007385) Copy
Ratings or validation data are available for this resource
NDRI is a Not-For-Profit (501c3) Corporation dedicated to providing the highest quality human biomaterials for research. NDRI makes it easy for researchers to get the human tissues and organs they need, prepared, preserved and shipped precisely according to their specific scientific protocols, as quickly as possible, and in the largest available quantities. NDRI provides researchers with protocol specific human neurological tissues such as brain stem, spinal cord, and basal ganglia, among others. In addition to control specimens, NDRI recovers tissues from donors with a variety of diseases, including Down syndrome, Parkinsons disease, Alzheimers disease, schizophrenia, and dementia. Through the NDRI 24/7 referral and procurement system, research consented biospecimens can be provided from low post mortem interval donors preserved at 4ºC, frozen or snap frozen, fixed, paraffin embedded, or as unstained slides.
Proper citation: National Disease Research Interchange (RRID:SCR_000550) Copy
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on June 28,2022. A network of several university centers in Germany that classifies neurological and psychiatric disorders neuropathologically and collects and provides brain tissue for research. The aim and task of the Brain-Net are: the collection of clinically and neuropathologically well-characterized brain tissue samples; the standardization of neuropathological diagnoses according to internationally accepted criteria; and providing a basis for future research projects using genetic, epidemiological, biometric and other issues to neurological and psychiatric disorders.
Proper citation: Brain-Net (RRID:SCR_005017) Copy
http://med.emory.edu/ADRC/research/core_neurology_database.html
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on June 9, 2025. A database which retains extensive clinical information about study subjects recruited by the Alzheimer's Disease Research Center Clinical Core, as well as other individuals with neurological diseases. In addition to clinical information, the database has basic demographics, medical history (including risk factors such as smoking), and a detailed family history from all subjects. Some entries have neuropsychological measures. Users can access a Summary Database which contains the most commonly requested variables. A data dictionary describing the variables in the Summary Database is available.
Proper citation: Emory Neurology Database (RRID:SCR_005277) Copy
http://med.brown.edu/neurology/brainbank/index.html
A tissue resource center which facilitates research into the relationship between Alzheimer's disease and other brain disorders such as strokes and mental illnesses. Most donations have been obtained from Alzheimer's patients. Normal controls are available, many of which are from subjects with close relatives with Alzheimer's. The Brown BTRC also supports a collection of brain tumor cases that were harvested from patients who underwent surgery and who were enrolled in a clinical trial for the development of new treatments for brain cancer.
Proper citation: Brown Brain Tissue Resource Center (RRID:SCR_005392) Copy
http://ccr.coriell.org/Sections/Collections/NINDS/?SsId=10
Open resource of biological samples (DNA, cell lines, and other biospecimens) and corresponding phenotypic data to promote neurological research. Samples from more than 34,000 unique individuals with cerebrovascular disease, dystonia, epilepsy, Huntington's Disease, motor neuron disease, Parkinsonism, and Tourette Syndrome, as well as controls (population control and unaffected relatives) have been collected. The mission of the NINDS Repository is to provide 1) genetics support for scientists investigating pathogenesis in the central and peripheral nervous systems through submissions and distribution; 2) information support for patients, families, and advocates concerned with the living-side of neurological disease and stroke.
Proper citation: NINDS Repository (RRID:SCR_004520) Copy
http://www.dementiatoday.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/MiniMentalStateExamination.pdf
A 30 question assessment test to screen patients for cognitive impairment that is commonly used in medicine to screen for dementia. It is also used to estimate the severity of cognitive impairment and to follow the course of cognitive changes in an individual over time, thus making it an effective way to document an individual's response to treatment. It takes about 10 minutes and examines functions including arithmetic, memory and orientation.
Proper citation: Mini-Mental State Examination (RRID:SCR_003681) Copy
http://www.biostat.wustl.edu/~adrc/cdrpgm/
A numeric scale used to quantify the severity of symptoms of dementia (i.e. its stage). Using a structured-interview protocol, a qualified health professional assesses a patient's cognitive and functional performance in six areas: memory, orientation, judgment and problem solving, community affairs, home and hobbies, and personal care. Scores in each of these are combined to obtain a composite score ranging from 0 through 3. (Adapted from Wikipedia)
Proper citation: Clinical Dementia Rating (RRID:SCR_003678) Copy
http://www.alz.washington.edu/
A clinical research, neuropathological research and collaborative research database that uses data collected from 29 NIA-funded Alzheimer's Disease Centers (ADCs). The database consists of several datasets, and searches may be done on the entire database or on individual datasets. Any researcher, whether affiliated with an ADC or not, may request a data file for analysis or aggregate data tables. Requested aggregate data tables are produced and returned as soon as the queue allows (usually within 1-3 days depending on the complexity).
Proper citation: National Alzheimer's Coordinating Center (RRID:SCR_007327) Copy
http://hrsonline.isr.umich.edu/
A data set of a longitudinal panel study of health, retirement, and aging that surveys a representative sample of more than 26,000 Americans over the age of 50 every two years. The HRS explores the changes in labor force participation and the health transitions that individuals undergo toward the end of their work lives and in the years that follow. The study captures a dynamic picture of an aging America''s physical and mental health, insurance coverage, financial status, family support systems, labor market status, and retirement planning. The sample in 2006 numbered over 22,000 persons in 13,100 households, with oversamples of Hispanics, Blacks and Florida residents. Beginning in 2006, half the sample received enhanced face-to-face follow-ups that included the collection of physical measures and biomarkers HRS provides a research data base that can simultaneously support continuous cross-sectional descriptions of the US population over the age of fifty-five, longitudinal studies of a given cohort over a substantial period of time (up to 18 years by 2010 for the original HRS cohort, following them from age 51-61 to age 69-79) and research on cross-cohort trends. By 2010 the HRS will be able to support cross-cohort comparisons of trajectories of health, labor supply, or wealth accumulation for persons who entered their 50s in 1992, 1998 and 2004. The HRS also has provided the sampling frame for targeted sub-studies. The Aging, Demographics, and Memory Study (ADAMS) supplement on dementia involved a field assessment of a sample of about 930 HRS panel members aged 75+ to clinically assess their dementia status and dementia severity. Special topics including consumption and time use, prescription drug use and the impact of Medicare Part D, parents'' human capital investments in children, and diabetes management by self-reported diabetics, have appeared on mail surveys that have used the HRS as a sampling frame. The HRS also can accommodate a number of experimental topics using Internet interviewing. The HRS is also characterized by links to a rich array of administrative data, including: Employer Pension Plans; National Death Index; Social Security Administration earnings and (projected) benefits data; W-2 self-employment data; and Medicare and Medicaid files. The HRS has actively collaborated with other longitudinal studies of aging in other countries (e.g., ELSA, SHARE, MHAS), providing both scientific and technical assistance. Data Availability: All publicly available data may be downloaded after registration. Early Release data files are typically available within three months of the end of each data collection, with the Final Release following at 24 months after the close of data collection activities. Files linked with administrative data are released only as restricted data through an application process, as outlined on the HRS website. * Dates of Study: 1992-present * Study Features: Longitudinal, Minority Oversamples, Anthropometric Measures, Biospecimens * Sample Size: 22,000+ Link * ICPSR: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/06854
Proper citation: Health and Retirement Study (RRID:SCR_008930) Copy
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on January 4, 2023.Consortium that developed brief, standardized and reliable procedures for the evaluation and diagnosis of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) and other dementias of the elderly. These procedures included data forms, flipbooks, guidebooks, brochures, instruction manuals and demonstration tapes, which are now available for purchase. The CERAD assessment material can be used for research purposes as well as for patient care. CERAD has developed several basic standardized instruments, each consisting of brief forms designed to gather data on normal persons as well as on cognitively impaired or behaviorally disturbed individuals. Such data permit the identification of dementia based on clinical, neuropsychological, behavioral or neuropathological criteria. Staff at participating CERAD sites were trained and certified to administer the assessment instruments and to evaluate the subjects enrolled in the study. Cases and controls were evaluated at entry and annually thereafter including (when possible) autopsy examination of the brain to track the natural progression of AD and to obtain neuropathological confirmation of the clinical diagnosis. The CERAD database has become a major resource for research in Alzheimer's disease. It contains longitudinal data for periods as long as seven years on the natural progression of the disorder as well as information on clinical and neuropsychological changes and neuropathological manifestations., THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 16,2025.
Proper citation: CERAD - Consortium to Establish a Registry for Alzheimer's Disease (RRID:SCR_003016) Copy
A European collaborative study to develop and validate new biomarkers for Alzheimer's disease. Central in the project is the development of an assay for the measurement of beta amyloid oligomers in cerebrospinal fluid and plasma. In order to validate the assay for beta amyloid oligomers, cerebrospinal fluid and plasma will be repeatedly collected in subjects with Alzheimer's disease, other types of dementia, mild cognitive impairment, and control subjects.
Proper citation: EDAR study: biomarkers for Alzheimer's disease (RRID:SCR_004445) Copy
A 10 question assessment to assess elderly patients for the possibility of dementia. The test has utility across a range of acute and outpatient settings. It takes five minutes to administer and must include all 10 questions. A score of less than 7 or 8 suggests cognitive impairment. Scoring: * 7-10 (correct) No Cognitive Impairment * 6-0 (correct) Cognitive Impairment, THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 16,2025.
Proper citation: Abbreviated Mental Test Score (RRID:SCR_003677) Copy
https://knightadrc.wustl.edu/professionals-clinicians/request-center-resources/
Provides on request resources including Data: clinical and cognitive measures as well as MRI and amyloid imaging scans; Tissue: frozen brain tissue, paraffin brain sections, antemortem CSF, DNA, fibroblast, dermal fibroblasts, plasma (fasting and non-fasting) and iPSC; Participants: eligible participants may be invited to enroll in research of other investigators after appropriate review. Researchers can use the request portal to review Center guidelines and policies; view available data and tissue; access data tables and codebooks; and submit request for resources.
Proper citation: Washington University School of Medicine Knight ADRC Request Center Resources Core Facility (RRID:SCR_025254) Copy
https://www.vai.org/research/collaborations/west-michigan-neurodegenerative-diseases-mind-program/
Brain bank that houses donated brains from people with neurodegenerative diseases and neurologically normal age-matched controls. VAI Brain Bank drives insight and discovery by providing scientists the samples needed to investigate the intricate underpinnings of Parkinson’s, dementias, and other neurodegenerative diseases.
Proper citation: Van Andel Institute Brain Bank (RRID:SCR_026035) Copy
http://www.alzheimer-europe.org/
A non-governmental organization aimed at raising awareness of all forms of dementia by creating a common European platform through co-ordination and co-operation between Alzheimer organizations throughout Europe. Alzheimer Europe is also a source of information on all aspects of dementia.
Proper citation: Alzheimer Europe (RRID:SCR_003802) Copy
http://www.alzheimer-hellas.gr/english.php
A non-profit organization whose aim is to offer advice concerning the care of Alzheimer''''s disease patients, information and services for the people affected and their families. Also, to offer mutual help to the family members of the patients in order to reduce the social, economic and emotional cost deriving from the long care of people suffering from dementia. Lastly, the association attempts to publicize the social needs of the population affected and to inform the public in order to be acquainted with the problem. The mission of the Greek Association of Alzheimer''''s Disease is * the early diagnosis of dementia by scientists * the promotion of research * education and training for all the stakeholders * the development of Care Units for patients with Alzheimer''''s Disease * the provision of useful information and advise (24 hour help-line) on dementia problems (caring, legal or financial issues) * the presentation of lectures by health professionals and informal carers, covering all aspects of Alzheimer Disease * and the development of professional seminars during the whole year.
Proper citation: Greek Association of Alzheimers Disease and Related Disorders (RRID:SCR_003938) Copy
http://www.brainnet-europe.org/
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE.Documented on July 7, 2022. Consortium of 19 brain banks across Europe with an aim to harmonize neuropathological diagnostic criteria and develop gold standards for quality, safety and ethics standards for brain banking. BrainNet Europe also contributes to research on rare diseases, such as: Pick''s disease or other rare forms of dementia, as well as to questions after the events in the aging brain. Anyone can be a donor - irrespective of disease of the central nervous system or not, because for research purposes, one does not only need tissue samples from ill donors, but also from healthy ones for comparison.
Proper citation: BrainNet Europe (RRID:SCR_004461) Copy
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on July 08, 2014. A multi-disciplinary institute providing specialized diagnostic evaluations, innovative treatments, education and research. It provides a collaborative, team-centered approach to provide innovative diagnostics to assist in developing cutting-edge brain based interventions and treatment strategies to best serve their patient's individual needs. Comprehensive Neuroscience Center is dedicated to working with children and adults who demonstrate neurodevelopmental disorders such as Autism Spectrum Disorders, Attention Deficits Hyperactivity Disorder, Learning Disabilities and Language-based deficits, as well as other neurological-based disorders including Traumatic brain injury, Disorders of Consciousness, Disorders of Aging, Alzheimer's and Dementia.
Proper citation: Comprehensive Neuroscience Center (RRID:SCR_008705) Copy
http://www.alzresearch.org/index.cfm
A Alzheimer's Disease Research Center (ADRC) whose goal is to conduct basic and clinical research aimed at understanding Alzheimer's disease. The Center enrolls a variety of individuals for clinical trials, evaluation and follow-up, including: normal control subjects, individuals with mild memory problems, and patients diagnosed with Alzheimer's Disease or related dementias. Researchers can request data and specimens obtained from ADRC subjects. These include blood or DNA, brain specimens, and cross-sectional or longitudinal clinical and cognitive data, all from ADRC subjects.
Proper citation: Johns Hopkins Alzheimer's Disease Research Center (RRID:SCR_008757) Copy
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