| Mild memory
loss could mean an increased risk for Alzheimer's disease, according
to researchers at the University of Kentucky's Sanders-Brown
Center on Aging.
"It
seems that mild cognitive impairments are not a part of the
normal aging process," said Kathryn P. Riley, Ph.D, and
lead author of the study. "Our findings and those of
other researchers suggest that Alzheimer's pathology in the
brain is affecting older adults long before the full symptoms
of the disease appear."
Their
study included 130 nuns, aged 75 to 102, who had mild memory
loss or other cognitive impairment. All were participants
in the larger Nun Study. (see earlier Alzheimer's Week story)
In the
recent study, researchers compared the levels and distribution
of neurofibrillary tangles (abnormal protein deposits) in
the nuns' brains to results of cognitive tests taken within
months of their deaths.
Data indicated
that levels of "tangles" paralleled increasingly
poor performance on cognitive tests. It also showed more tangles
in patients when memory deficits accompanied cognitive impairment,
as opposed to those subjects who suffered only from cognitive
loss.
While
the research supports awareness that mild cognitive impairment
is a risk factor for Alzheimer's Disease, Riley said her study
also indicates that not everyone with impairments will develop
full-blown dementia.
In fact,
almost half the nuns who experienced mild cognitive impairment
accompanied by higher levels of tangles never developed Alzheimer's
disease.
Riley
stresses the need for full evaluation when memory or cognitive
loss is suspected.
"This
information may be useful in light of newly developing treatments
designed to delay the onset of cognitive impairment associated
with Alzheimer's disease," Riley said. "Researchers
and clinicians in the field of aging hope someday to be able
to prevent mild cognitive impairments from progressing on
to more severe conditions and ultimately, to be able to prevent
the impairments from occurring in the first place."
Source:
Alzheimer Week
of March 31, 2002
|