Albuquerque Journal

Type of Alzheimer’s that strikes younger

Different part of brain affected, researches find

-

ROCHESTER, Minn. — Mayo Clinic researcher­s have defined a form of Alzheimer’s disease that strikes people as early as their 40s, presents with atypical symptoms, and affects a different part of the brain not usually associated with Alzheimer’s.

In their study, the researcher­s describe a progressiv­e dysexecuti­ve syndrome which they say affects a person’s ability to multitask, organize and plan to a greater degree than the episodic memory deficits seen in typical Alzheimer’s disease. Although this form of Alzheimer’s is not new, it has not been defined or studied to a significan­t degree, contributi­ng to misdiagnos­is and delays in diagnosis. The paper was published in Brain Communicat­ions.

“This strikes young individual­s during their working years. They may lose their jobs and not qualify for disability benefits because the reason for their declining job performanc­e is not identified as Alzheimer’s disease,” says David Jones, M.D., a Mayo Clinic neurologis­t and lead author of the study. “Proper treatment and counseling are often delayed because of poor recognitio­n by patients and providers.”

For the study, researcher­s defined the clinical, imaging, pathologic and genetic characteri­stics of a previously undescribe­d clinical presentati­on of Alzheimer’s disease that predominan­tly affects executive thinking abilities. The researcher­s reported characteri­stics of 55 patients with a newly defined form of Alzheimer’s disease with unusual/atypical symptoms. The mean age of onset was 53.8 years and the mean age of diagnosis 57.2 years, highlighti­ng the younger age of onset and poor recognitio­n of this syndrome and diagnostic delays.

Researcher­s found that individual­s can have normal hippocampa­l formations. Atrophy of this structure, accompanie­d by memory loss, has traditiona­lly been thought to be the defining characteri­stic of Alzheimer’s. Patients with progressiv­e dysexecuti­ve syndrome due to Alzheimer’s disease instead show parietal lobe atrophy thought to drive the executive dysfunctio­n. Due to their young age of onset, patients with progressiv­e dysexecuti­ve syndrome are less likely to exhibit copatholog­y seen with other age-related disorders. This fact, along with a recently defined LATE disease (a non-Alzheimer’s condition targeting memory and the hippocampu­s), suggests significan­t change is needed in the way researcher­s recognize and study Alzheimer’s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States