2000 6Th Ave S, Birmingham, AL 35233 (205)9349999 (Phone)
Certifications:
Neurology, 1992
Awards:
Healthgrades Honor Roll
Languages:
English
Education:
Medical School SUNY Upstate Medical University (Syracuse) Graduated: 1986 Medical School Mt Sinai Med Center Graduated: 1987 Medical School Case West Res Graduated: 1990 Medical School University Fla Graduated: 1991
Dr. Geldmacher graduated from the SUNY Upstate Medical University in 1986. He works in Birmingham, AL and specializes in Neurology. Dr. Geldmacher is affiliated with Birmingham VA Medical Center and University Of Alabama Hospital.
University of Alabama-Birmingham
Director, Division of Memory Disorders and Behavioral Neurology
University of Virginia Jul 2002 - Feb 2011
Associate Professor of Neurology
Case Western Reserve University Jan 1993 - Jun 2002
Assistant and Associate Professor of Neurology
Education:
Suny Upstate/Health Science Center at Syracuse 1982 - 1986
Doctor of Medicine, Doctorates, Medicine
University of Rochester 1978 - 1982
Bachelors, Bachelor of Arts, Biology, Psychology
Skills:
Alzheimer's Disease Alzheimer's Care Clinical Research Clinical Trials Medical Education
Youtube
Alzheimers Disease Research Update 2020 with...
David Geldmacher, MD, Professor and Warren Family Endowed Chair in Neu...
Duration:
1h 1m 59s
Dr. David Geldmacher, MD UAB Medicine Dement...
Dr. David Geldmacher, MD of UAB Medicine presents a presentation on de...
Duration:
56m 31s
Memory Disorders: The UAB Difference
Keep your brain sharp with tricks from David Geldmacher, MD, and learn...
Duration:
3m 10s
UAB Memory Disorders Clinic
David Geldmacher, MD, discusses the latest treatment and research brea...
Duration:
4m 37s
UAB Medicine Mini-Medical School - Alzheimer's
David Geldmacher, M.D., FACP, professor in the Department of Neurology...
Duration:
1h 6m 36s
Koyunbaba played by Andreas Geldmacher
Andreas Geldmacher plays "Koyunbaba", composed by Carlo Domeniconi, at...
In my experience, Alzheimers disease is the most feared disease in people over 65, said David Geldmacher, M.D., the director of the Division of Memory Disorders in the Department of Neurology at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. And while its true that efforts to find a cure for AD have
Neurologist Dr. David Geldmacher, the program's director, said he is not misleading patients. He gives estimates based on published studies. "I am careful to say I can't make a specific calculation for any one individual but I can say people with this profile have this risk, you may vary but this is
Another dementia expert, David Geldmacher, MD, of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, told MedPage Today that the potential benefit for dementia risk is worth bringing up with patients, even though recommendations of physical activity and fitness are familiar to everybody.
rosclerosis, can bring about vascular dementia, which occurs when artery blockages (including strokes) kill brain tissue.Having high glucose is a stressor to the nervous system and to the blood vessels, says David Geldmacher, MD, a professor of neurology at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. The em
and narrowing of arteries in the brain. This condition, known as atherosclerosis, can bring about vascular dementia, which occurs when artery blockages (including strokes) kill brain tissue."Having high glucose is a stressor to the nervous system and to the blood vessels," says David Geldmacher, M.D.
"Having high glucose is a stressor to the nervous system and to the blood vessels," says David Geldmacher, M.D., a professor of neurology at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. "The emerging information on Alzheimer's disease and glucose shows us that we do need to remain vigilant on blood suga