Videos can now track Alzheimer's
 
Erica Goode The New York Times
Friday, February 7, 2003
Scientists have developed a technique that allows them to watch the spread of Alzheimer's disease through the brains of living patients "like a flow of lava," as one researcher put it.
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The technique, described Thursday in The Journal of Neuroscience, may help pharmaceutical companies evaluate the effectiveness of Alzheimer's drugs and aid in the early identification of people who are at highest risk for developing the disease. In the technique, a computer analyzes single brain scans taken over time and generates three-dimensional videos.
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"People have used imaging before, but the studies have really been like taking Polaroid pictures at the ballet," said Dr. Paul Thompson, an assistant professor of neurology at the University of California at Los Angeles and the lead author of the report. "This is really the first study to chart the dynamic spread of Alzheimer's in the brain."
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Thompson's research team collaborated with investigators from the University of Queensland in Australia, Addenbrooke's Hospital in Cambridge, England, and GlaxoSmithKline Pharmaceuticals in conducting the study.
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The videos were based on the analysis of subtle changes in the brain scans of 12 patients with Alzheimer's, compared with those of 14 elderly people without the disease. The videos depict the average loss of brain cells in different brain areas for the Alzheimer's patients.
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Researchers have long known through autopsy studies that Alzheimer's patients show the progressive death of nerve cells in many areas of the brain. But in the videos, the damage can be seen moving from structures involved with memory to brain areas involved in emotion and in the control of behavior.
.
Other regions of the brain - sensory centers responsible for vision and touch, for example - remained untouched, Thompson said, calling them "islands of cells in all this devastating sequence of loss."
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The researchers found that the loss of brain tissue progressed at a rate of about 4 to 5 percent each year in the Alzheimer's patients, while in healthy brains, only about 0.5 percent is lost each year in aging.
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The technique, said Dr. Thomas Chase, chief of experimental therapeutics at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke in the United States and an expert on Alzheimer's treatment, "adds to our understanding of the time course that unfolds in an Alzheimer's brain and therefore is of general interest."
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But he added, "The real question is, does this advance our ability to deal with Alzheimer's, to understand precisely what the disease is and to discover more effective therapies?"
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Scientists have developed a technique that allows them to watch the spread of Alzheimer's disease through the brains of living patients "like a flow of lava," as one researcher put it.
.
The technique, described Thursday in The Journal of Neuroscience, may help pharmaceutical companies evaluate the effectiveness of Alzheimer's drugs and aid in the early identification of people who are at highest risk for developing the disease. In the technique, a computer analyzes single brain scans taken over time and generates three-dimensional videos.
.
"People have used imaging before, but the studies have really been like taking Polaroid pictures at the ballet," said Dr. Paul Thompson, an assistant professor of neurology at the University of California at Los Angeles and the lead author of the report. "This is really the first study to chart the dynamic spread of Alzheimer's in the brain."
.
Thompson's research team collaborated with investigators from the University of Queensland in Australia, Addenbrooke's Hospital in Cambridge, England, and GlaxoSmithKline Pharmaceuticals in conducting the study.
.
The videos were based on the analysis of subtle changes in the brain scans of 12 patients with Alzheimer's, compared with those of 14 elderly people without the disease. The videos depict the average loss of brain cells in different brain areas for the Alzheimer's patients.
.
Researchers have long known through autopsy studies that Alzheimer's patients show the progressive death of nerve cells in many areas of the brain. But in the videos, the damage can be seen moving from structures involved with memory to brain areas involved in emotion and in the control of behavior.
.
Other regions of the brain - sensory centers responsible for vision and touch, for example - remained untouched, Thompson said, calling them "islands of cells in all this devastating sequence of loss."
.
The researchers found that the loss of brain tissue progressed at a rate of about 4 to 5 percent each year in the Alzheimer's patients, while in healthy brains, only about 0.5 percent is lost each year in aging.
.
The technique, said Dr. Thomas Chase, chief of experimental therapeutics at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke in the United States and an expert on Alzheimer's treatment, "adds to our understanding of the time course that unfolds in an Alzheimer's brain and therefore is of general interest."
.
But he added, "The real question is, does this advance our ability to deal with Alzheimer's, to understand precisely what the disease is and to discover more effective therapies?"
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