Improve your brain health and reduce the risk of dementia

- Personalized program
- 7 lifestyle interventions
- Based on the latest research
- Measurable results

Getting started
from 229kr/month with no commitment period

How it works

1. Risk assessment
The program starts with a risk assessment consisting of cognitive tests and blood tests at any of our 250+ clinics to analyze your cognitive ability, your health status and tailor your treatment.
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2. treatment plan
Based on your risk profile, we work with you to develop a plan, based on medical science and research, to effectively help you reduce your risk of dementia and improve your cognitive ability.
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3. flexible follow-up
We customize the program and your follow-up for best results. Every 6 months we measure your progress so you get confirmation of the program's effect and you choose how long you want to stay. Therefore, the program is without a commitment period.
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What the program consists of
Dietary advice
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Cognitive exercises
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Physical activity
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Stress management
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Sleep advice
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Monitoring cardiovascular risk
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Intervention group compared to control group
The percentage shows improvement compared to the control group.
FINGER study,
Ngandu, Kivipelto et al. Lancet 2015

How we help your brain

Pannlobes / frontal lobes

Function

The frontal lobe is one of the most complex areas of the brain. It sits at the front of the brain, behind the forehead, and acts as a 'boss office' for many of our most advanced and human functions.

It controls planning, decision-making, impulse control, our conscious movements and our working memory, among other things.

Example: The frontal lobe helps you to create a plan, follow it, and adjust it if necessary.

The problem

  1. Difficult to solve problems
  2. Lack of impulse control
  3. Lack of judgment
  4. Impairment ability to concentrate

Solutions

  • Train executive functions. Playing strategy games where you have to plan, prioritize and break down tasks into subtasks is also very good training.
  • Improve impulse control and emotion regulation. Practicing mindfulness is one of the hardest things many people know - but it is extremely effective. Practicing being present, identifying emotions in different situations and setting clear boundaries makes everyday life much more structured and enjoyable.

Cerebral lobe / Parietal lobe

Function

Located behind the frontal lobe and above the occipital lobe, the temporal lobe is the brain's 'sensory control center'.

It plays a crucial role in how we perceive and interpret the world around us through the senses - particularly touch, spatial awareness and attention.

Example: If someone taps you on the shoulder, the frontal lobe tells you where it happened and how it felt.

The problem

  1. Reading difficulties (dyslexia)
  2. Difficulty feeling pain
  3. Difficulty drawing figures
  4. Difficulties in interpreting distances

Solutions

  • Practicing body awareness (proprioception). To regain and improve your awareness of where your body is in space, you need to activate and stimulate the brain's so-called plasticity - the brain's ability to adapt and relearn.
  • Practice spatial thinking and spatial perception. For example, by trying to navigate without GPS, painting 3-dimensionally or building with LEGO, you train the brain's so-called visuospatial ability and mental mapping to better interpret images, distances and symbols.

Tinning lobes / Temporal lobes

Function

The temporal lobe is an important area on the sides of the brain, roughly behind the ears.

It plays a central role in hearing, language, memory and emotions. The temporal lobe acts as a kind of interpreter and memory bank, where sensory impressions are processed and linked to meaning and emotion.

Example: You hear a voice and remember who it belongs to - thanks to the temporal lobe and hippocampus.

The problem

  1. Language difficulties (aphasia)
  2. Difficulty recognizing sounds
  3. Memory difficulties (amnesia)
  4. Face blindness (Prosopagnosia)

Solutions

  • Practice listening and language comprehension. By listening to different voices and dialects in audiobooks and podcasts or in different languages, you challenge and train your listening comprehension as well as your language comprehension. You can also use language apps, try to learn new words every day and use them in conversation or play word games such as crosswords.
  • Stimulate learning and memory functions. Try remembering more complex things using memory techniques, telling stories to store information of a sequence of events (episodic memory) or challenging yourself with new activities to stimulate memory and learning. Make sure to also exercise regularly and prioritize sleep to help your body consolidate and store memories.

Neck lobes / Occipital lobes

Function

The occipital lobe is the part of the brain located at the back, above the neck bone.

It is the visual center of the brain, specialized in receiving, processing and interpreting information from the visual sense.

Example: Imagine that the eyes are cameras. Then the occipital lobe is the processor that makes the image intelligible.

The problem

  1. Visual field defects
  2. Difficulty recognizing colors
  3. Partial or total blindness
  4. Visual hallucinations

Solutions

  • Vision training / Visual rehabilitation. Trains the brain to process visual impressions by, for example, practicing color and contrast recognition, following moving objects with the eyes, and identifying objects in different parts of the visual field.
  • Using visual aids. Aids such as contrast enhancement (e.g. lighting), apps that magnify text or read out text, and prism glasses are examples of aids that can help facilitate the interpretation of what is in front of you so that the information can be processed more easily.

Cerebellum / cerebellum

Function

The cerebellum is located at the back of the brain, under the occipital lobe and behind the brainstem.

Although it accounts for only about 10% of the brain's volume, it contains over 50% of all neurons. It is thus extremely tightly connected and plays a crucial role in the body's fine motor skills, balance and coordination - but also in certain cognitive and emotional functions.

Examples: playing an instrument, catching a ball or writing with a pen

The problem

  1. Impaired movement control (dysmetria)
  2. Slurred speech (dysarthria)
  3. Unsteady gait
  4. Tremors that increase during movement (intention tremor)

Solutions

  • Balance and coordination training. The best training for the cerebellum is that which requires precision. Examples include standing on one leg with your eyes closed, walking on a line or standing on a balance board. Other coordination challenges include throwing a ball with the wrong hand or dancing something you didn't know before.
  • Double tasks and new skills. The cerebellum is effectively trained when you do two things at the same time, such as balancing while telling a story or doing different movements while counting the days of the week backwards. Another effective training area for the cerebellum is learning something new that requires motor skills, such as learning a new musical instrument, taking up juggling or starting to play table tennis. The rule of thumb is that the more difficult it is, the better, as it stimulates the brain more.

The brain stem

Function

The brainstem is the oldest and most basic part of the brain - a kind of 'bridge of life' between the brain and the spinal cord.

Despite its small size, it controls vital functions, such as breathing, heart rate, alertness and reflexes. It is also a highway for nerve signals between brain and body.

The problem

  1. Paralysis‍
  2. Irregular breathing
  3. Numbness and loss of sensation
  4. Low pulse rate

Solutions

  • It depends on the cause, extent and area. Because the brainstem is vital and complex, treatment is usually multidisciplinary - which means addressing several things at once. Treatments and solutions aim to:

    - Stabilize vital functions
    - Regain function through rehabilitation
    - Compensate for lost abilities‍
What you think of us
Here are some of our specialists
Kristina Iritz
Dementia nurse
Linda Hildenbeck
Dementia nurse
Simon Körösi
Physician and health educator
Keivan Javanshiri
Doctors and researchers
Here we are
Getting started

FAQ

What is the brain check?

Brain Check is a so-called multimodal lifestyle intervention program to improve your brain health and reduce your risk of future dementia.

This means that by following the program and your individual plan in Brain Check, you reduce your risk of future dementia and improve your brain health. This is because Brain Check is a program that is designed and developed based on current knowledge and the latest research on brain function needs.

Your team, assigned to you when you start, will combine the latest research and their knowledge of the brain with information about you and your risks.
This will then result in an individualized plan to reduce your future risk of dementia.

Who can be involved in the brain scan?

Anyone over the age of 18 who wants to improve their brain health and reduce their risk of future dementia can take part in Brain Check.

Research clearly shows that it is never too late to start tackling your brain health and start addressing any risk factors, but rather the opposite - the earlier you start, the more impact you will have.

Whatever your underlying conditions and medications, your team and your doctor will follow you and enable you to participate in the program. You will receive a plan that is tailored to you and your needs.

What does the Brain Health Program cost?

Hjärnkollen with minnesmottagningen.se costs from SEK 229 per month (no commitment period).

What is included in the price?

Cognitive testing

Medical assessment

Personal plan
- Stress management
- Dietary advice
- Exercise program
- Sleep advice
- Cognitive optimization

Lectures
and seminars

Follow-ups (which measure your development in the program)


Supplement: Blood tests where we also follow your development through biomarkers - SEK 289 / month.
This can also be paid separately in the program for SEK 229 / month if you would like to add it during the program.

What evidence is there for the program?

Scientific evidence that lifestyle intervention programs could reduce the risk of cognitive decline and later dementia, while improving brain health, was first shown in the FINGER study published in 2015.

Since then, research has been conducted in many countries to develop the idea of lifestyle programs with the goal of strengthening the brain, keeping it functioning well and thus reducing the risk of disease.

Links to some of these studies:

FINGER study: https://pubmed.ncbi.nl
m .nih.gov/25771249/
FINGER-NL study: https://alzres.biomedce
ntral .com/articles/10.11
86/s13195-024-01495-8

Online multidomain intervention: https://pubmed.ncbi.nl
m .nih.gov/39875685/
LETHE project: https://www.lethe-
project.eu/
Maintain your brain: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36806506/
SUPERBRAIN-MEET: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10864697/

Where is the nearest sampling point/clinic?

Minnesmottagningen.se collaborates with over 250 clinics across Sweden that offer testing.

Scroll up above to see a map of clinics.

Is your city not on the map of clinics?
Contact us via chat or atminnesmottagningen and we will help you.
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