Iran Daily

Study highlights a complex and under-recognized form of dementia

-

The long-running study on aging and brain health at the University of Kentucky’s Sanders-brown Center on Aging Alzheimer’s Disease Center has once again resulted in important new findings — highlighti­ng a complex and under-recognized form of dementia.

The work was recently published in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n (JAMA): Neurology, news-medical.net reported.

Erin Abner, study lead author and associate professor of University of Kentucky’s Sanders-brown Center on Aging (SBCOA) and College of Public Health said: “One of the things that we’ve learned in the last decade or so is that a lot of people that we think have dementia from Alzheimer’s disease, actually don’t.

“There are other brain diseases that cause the same kind of symptoms as Alzheimer’s, including some that we only recently figured out existed.”

Abner collaborat­ed with several of her colleagues at SBCOA for the study, which used brain autopsy data from 375 older adults within the University of Kentucky Alzheimer Disease Center Brain Bank.

This work builds on the work done last year by Dr. Pete Nelson and his team to discover another form of dementia caused by TDP-43 proteinopa­thy now known as LATE.

Abner refered to misfolded TDP-43 protein, which was discovered in 2006, as the

“newest brain bad guy.”

She said although TDP-43 exists normally in a non-disease causing form, it is seen in multiple debilitati­ng diseases in addition to LATE, including ALS and frontotemp­oral dementia.

She said as she and the team at SBCOA reviewed clinical and brain autopsy data for research participan­ts, they noticed there were significan­tly more people than expected that had not only Alzheimer’s pathology but also pathology indicating Lewy bodies (alpha synuclein), and the “newest brain bad guy” — TDP-43.

“They had every neurodegen­eration causing pathology that we know about. There was not a name for this, so we came up with one:

Quadruple misfolded proteins, or QMP,” stated Abner.

The group then obtained more data to conduct a study of how often QMP occurred and what that meant for the participan­t with QMP.

The study found that about 20 percent of the participan­ts with dementia had QMP, and their dementia was the most severe.

“This is not great news, because it means that even if we could completely cure Alzheimer’s disease, we still have to deal with TDP-43 and alpha synuclein, and they are common in old age. But, we have to understand exactly what we are up against as we try to stop dementia. We still have so much to learn,” said Abner.

 ??  ?? news-medical.net
news-medical.net

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Iran