In the News

Construction of Center for Brain Health more than a third complete

April 19, 2024

Construction on the $100 million Center for Brain Health, a new patient care and clinical trials facility of UT Health San Antonio, is now about 35% complete, with full completion expected by September 2025 and an anticipated opening in December 2025. The Center for Brain Health — located at 4940 Charles Katz Drive — is […]


Texas Public Radio: Fighting Alzheimer’s at the eye doctor

April 2, 2024

Margaret Flanagan, MD, is a neuropathologist at the Biggs Institute — an expert in brain tissue and how it changes in the presence of diseases like Alzheimer’s. Dr. Flanagan is working on a test to help detect dementia early at the eye doctor’s office. Listen here to learn more: Science & Medicine: Fighting Alzheimer’s at the […]


UT Health San Antonio doctors among first to implant rechargeable deep brain stimulation device

February 16, 2024

Doctors at The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio (UT Health San Antonio) are among the nation’s first to implant a newly approved sensing rechargeable deep brain stimulation device with a 15-year battery life allowing more continual treatment of patients with movement disorders. Deep brain stimulation, known as DBS, is the placement […]


KSAT: Brain thinning could predict dementia 5 to 10 years before symptoms, local study shows

January 30, 2024

Through a decade’s worth of findings, researchers at the Biggs Institute for Alzheimer’s and Neurodegenerative Diseases at UT Health San Antonio are discovering a connection between the thickness of brain tissue to dementia risks. Claudia Satizabal, PhD, associate professor at the Biggs Institute and lead researcher on this study, said duplicating this marker could be […]


TPR: Science & Medicine: Alzheimer’s and the inflammatory trigger

December 20, 2023

  Bess Frost, PhD, an associate professor in Cell Systems and Anatomy, and her team recently discovered that an inflammatory trigger, like one present during viral infections, is elevated in Alzheimer’s — but this inflammatory trigger isn’t from our time. To listen to the podcast or read the article, visit TPR.org.


TPR: Science & Medicine: The Brain Bank

November 20, 2023

  Brain donations provide families with answers and closure while providing key resources for research, said Kevin Bieniek, PhD, director of the Brain Bank at the Glenn Biggs Institute for Alzheimer’s and Neurodegenerative Diseases at UT Health Science Center San Antonio. To listen to the podcast or read the article, visit TPR.org.


TPR: Science & Medicine: Omega 3 fatty acids to fight Alzheimer’s

November 5, 2023

  People in their 40s and 50s may be able to fight Alzheimer’s disease with Omega 3 fatty acids found in fatty fish and fish oils, according to Claudia Satizabal, Ph.D, assistant professor of population health sciences with the Glenn Biggs Institute for Alzheimer’s and Neurodegenerative Diseases at UT Health San Antonio. To listen to the […]


TPR: Science & Medicine: Using AI for brain health diagnoses

October 29, 2023

  Artificial intelligence may be somewhat unsettling, but it also has the potential to improve and even save lives, according to Mohamad Habes, PhD, assistant professor of radiology and director of the neuroimaging core at the Glenn Biggs Institute for Alzheimer’s and Neurodegenerative Diseases at UT Health Science Center San Antonio. To listen to the podcast or […]


TPR: Science & Medicine: Brain healthy diets

October 21, 2023

  Debora Melo van Lent, PhD, nutrition scientist and epidemiologist at the Biggs Institute for Alzheimer’s and Neurodegenerative Diseases at UT Health San Antonio, shares the latest discoveries from research studies focused on diets that might slow brain aging and our risks for developing dementia. To listen to the podcast or read the article, visit […]


Using AI to diagnose brain disease in seconds

August 8, 2023

Stroke has occurred several times in your family. Aunt Mary suffered hers at the dinner table on a holiday. The fork she was holding fell to the table. Grandmother Sadie’s happened during her last years when you were away at college. Her thinking was never sharp again. Yes, your family history includes stroke and dementia […]