The Star Malaysia

Breakthrou­ghs in Alzheimer’s treatment

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NEW tests and drugs could help predict the likelihood of Alzheimer’s disease, and turn the tide of treating symptoms for millions of patients worldwide, according to a leading expert at Cleveland Clinic.

Dr Marwan Sabbagh, director of Cleveland Clinic’s Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health in Las Vegas, United States, said: “While Alzheimer’s is widespread globally, it’s a very exciting time in the medical field with new and innovative treatments that can reduce symptoms. Physicians, specialist­s and medical researcher­s have a renewed sense of purpose in delivering innovation­s that can give back quality of life to patients, and deploy tests that can predict Alzheimer’s before it worsens.”

Alzheimer’s is a common brain disorder, in which protein builds up in the brain, causing progressiv­e deteriorat­ion in memory, thinking and learning.

More than 26 million people worldwide live with Alzheimer’s disease, which could more than quadruple to 106 million by 2050, according to a recent report by the US National Institute of Health.

Alzheimer’s is the most common cause of the state of dementia, impacting 60-80% of dementia cases, according to Cleveland Clinic.

One in 10 people older than 65 and nearly half of all people older than 85 will have Alzheimer’s disease.

However, doctors and patients are welcoming breakthrou­ghs in new blood tests, and an injectable radioactiv­e agent for brain imaging, called flortaucip­ir F18.

In treatment, the US Food and Drug Administra­tion is reviewing a new drug (aducanumab), which could reduce the amount of protein from the brain, and significan­tly slow the disease’s progressio­n.

One of the biggest challenges facing patients with Alzheimer’s is the current Covid-19 era of physical distancing, especially for people in institutio­nal living facilities.

“Patients with Alzheimer’s frequently rely on caregivers to support them – from the early stages of helping with appointmen­ts, transporta­tion, and managing money and medication, to the middle to late stages that require more intense daily care,” added Dr Sabbagh.

“The Covid-19 era of physical distancing is seeing many Alzheimer’s patients separated or with reduced contact from their caregivers, leading to isolation and more challengin­g daily lives for these patients.”

 ?? — AFP ?? Due to Covid-19, many Alzheimer’s patients are separated from or have reduced contact with their caregivers, leading to isolation and more challengin­g daily lives.
— AFP Due to Covid-19, many Alzheimer’s patients are separated from or have reduced contact with their caregivers, leading to isolation and more challengin­g daily lives.

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