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April 8 - New Technologies Help Determine
Whether Cognitive Impairment Will Lead To Alzheimer's
With nearly 10 million baby boomers at risk
for developing Alzheimer's disease, researchers are taking
a closer look at a condition known as mild cognitive impairment.
This is a state between the normal forgetfulness that comes
with aging and the more pronounced thinking deficits of dementia.
Mild cognitive impairment often progresses to Alzheimer's
disease, but some people remain stable and others recover.
New technology is improving the ability to determine who might
fall into each category, reports a recent issue of the Harvard
Mental Health Letter. These developments are
promising because they are occurring just as the first disease-modifying
drugs for Alzheimer's have reached
late-stage clinical testing.
One technology, fluorodeoxyglucose positron
emission tomography (FDG-PET), measures blood glucose metabolism
in the cerebral cortex. Diminished glucose uptake suggests
that neurons are not as active. Clinicians can also measure
brain volume changes with volumetric MRI to detect shrinkage,
which is typical in Alzheimer's. These techniques are likely
to prove most useful when combined with detection of newly
discovered proteins believed to be the first signs of Alzheimer's.
If one of these technologies or a combination
can reliably predict which people with cognitive impairment
are likely to progress to Alzheimer's, scientists might be
able to determine who should get the disease-modifying medications
now in development. And they might be able to predict which
healthy people are most likely to get mild cognitive impairment,
and try to prevent it.
The technologies and medications needed to
predict and prevent mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's
are still in the early stages of development, but the Harvard
Mental Health Letter says that this research
will almost certainly lead to better treatments.
Source: Harvard Mental Health
Letter
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