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Date: October 6, 2016October 10, 2016 Author: admin Comments: 0
  • Category Alzheimer's
  • Category In the News

Alzheimer’s show signs of gaining foothold years before symptoms

New research into the genetic underpinnings of. Alzheimer’s disease offers fresh evidence that the dev­astating brain disorder may gain a foothold years before dementia sets in, and takes a key step toward earlier detec­tion of the disease.

In a study that scoured the genes of healthy young peo­ple for the presence of vari­ants linked to Alzheimer’s dis­ease, researchers have found that those who carried many of the telltale gene variations had a smaller hippo campus — a brain structure that is crucial to memory formation than did their peers with few of the genetic variations.

While statistically sig­nificant, the association was somewhat weak. But it was clearly detectable in cognitively healthy study participants who were still very young between 18 and 36 years old.

When a large population of older study participants with­out dementia underwent the same broad genetic query, the test was able to distinguish those with poorer memory and cognitive function from those whose mental faculties were still strong.

On average, researchers found that the more Alzheim­er’s disease genetic variants an older study participant car-Tied, the smaller his hippo cam­pus and the greater was the presence in his brain of beta­amyloid protein the sticky stuff that forms brain plaques in those with Alzheim.er’s dis­ease. The study was published in the journal Neurology.

The genetic test, which queried the genome at sev­eral thousand sites that have been linked to Alzheimer’s disease, also detected with some accuracy participants who, over a three-year follow-up period, would go on to have Alzheimer’s.

The genetic test used in the latest study is unlikely at any point soon to be a useful predictor of who will develop Alzheimer’s and who won’t, experts said. For now, its princi­pal use may be to identify people who are at unusually high risk of developing symptoms of dementia as they age. Those people might then be enrolled in clinical trials of therapies that could delay or disniptthe onset of .Alzheimer’s disease’s most telling symptom pro­gressive loss of memory and cognitive function.

Heredity is believed to play , a powerful role in Alzheimer’s risk. Certain variations in one gene, called APOE, appear to account for some of Aizheimer’s inherited risk about 6 percent.

Source: Star tribune 7-17-16

  • #Alzheimer's disease

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