Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Amyloid
aggregations and Tau Pathology reflected by
Cortical Thickness in the Default Network of
MCI and AD
Newswise — Alzheimer’s disease patients show
a relentless decline in memory over the
course of the disease, which is accompanied
by both brain atrophy and by characteristic
deposits in the brain tissue called amyloid
plaques and neurofibrillary tangles.
Researchers from the Chinese Academy of
Sciences studied a large database, collected
in the US, of patients with Alzheimer’s or
memory complaints who had MRI scans and had
spinal taps to collect cerebrospinal fluid,
which is in the brain and spinal chord.
By examining the CFS they could measure the
amounts of the substances that make p
plaques and tangles, and related this to
brain atrophy.
They found that the amount of plaque and
tangle-producing chemicals in the
cerebrospinal fluid correlated with brain
tissue loss in selective regions of the
brain which are typically affected in
Alzheimer’s disease.
The brains in these regions had thinned out
suggesting that brain cells had died. These
regions are important for memory and are
typically active when the brain is at rest.
Using these techniques may ultimately help
identify early markers of disease in
Alzheimer’s, potentially indicating who is
likely to develop Alzheimer’s before memory
loss is critical.