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buy furacin online Scientists know that carrying a particular gene called APOE-04 puts you at a slightly higher risk for developing Alzheimer???s disease. They also know quite a bit about what an adult???s diseased brain looks like. But what happens between the time you???re born with that higher risk and how and when you develop the disease isn???t so clear. So researcher Sean Deoni at Brown University and colleagues at the Banner Alzheimer???s Institute in Arizona scanned 162 healthy babies??? brains to learn more. Sixty of them had the risk gene. And the researchers found some differences in the babies??? brains, differences that might give Alzheimers a better foothold later in life. It???s the earliest age at which scientists have been able to detect these differences. But Deoni says it???s just a snapshot in time, and doesn???t predict whether the children will definitely develop Alzheimer's.