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Feb. 7, 2003 - UCLA and University of
Queensland (Australia) neuroscientists using a powerful new imaging
analysis technique have created the first three-dimensional video
maps showing how Alzheimer's disease systematically engulfs the
brains of living patients.
The dramatic time-lapse videos show the
sequential destruction of brain areas that control memory function,
then emotion and inhibition, and finally sensation. They also show
how the disease spares small brain regions that control vision and
other functions that remain intact in Alzheimer's patients.
The analysis technique, which detects very
fine changes in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) brain scans, offers
doctors and researchers a powerful new tool that could speed
diagnosis and intervention, and development of new therapies.
Currently, the impact of therapy with cholinergic drugs and
antioxidants is typically assessed only with cognitive tests; the
physical spread of the disease can be evaluated only in autopsy
studies. The findings appear in the Feb. 1 edition of the
peer-reviewed Journal of Neuroscience.
"For the first time, you can see Alzheimer's
disease progressing in living patients," said Paul Thompson, an
assistant professor of neurology at the David Geffen School of
Medicine at UCLA and the study's chief investigator. "We were
stunned to see a spreading wave of tissue loss. Initially confined
to memory areas, this loss moved across the brain like a wild fire,
destroying more and more tissue as the disease progressed."
"This type of imaging will allow doctors and
researchers to pinpoint where and how fast the disease is
spreading," said Thompson, a researcher at the UCLA Laboratory of
Neuro Imaging. "We will urgently apply this method to reveal how
drugs and vaccines combat the wave of brain damage caused by
Alzheimer's disease."
Alzheimer's afflicts 10 percent of people
older than 65. Physicians know that brain lesions, called amyloid
plaques and tangles, accumulate in Alzheimer's patients' brains,
causing memory loss, disorientation and declining ability to cope
with everyday life as brain cells die.
In order to track this cell death, the
research team scanned 12 Alzheimer's patients and 14 healthy elderly
volunteers with MRI brain scans every three months for two years.
Using the new image analysis technique, the
researchers found that the Alzheimer's patients lost an average of
5.3 percent of their gray matter per year. Brain cells were purged
even faster in some brain regions, with patients losing up to 10
percent in memory regions each year. In contrast, healthy elderly
volunteers lost only 0.9 percent of their brain tissue annually.
The time-lapse video based on these scans
revealed that the leading edge of cell loss moved forward like a
burning frontier. As patients' symptoms worsened, the wave of cell
loss hit frontal and central brain regions. These brain areas
control patients' inhibitions and emotional states. After two years,
the disease had engulfed virtually the entire brain.
This report was provided by University
Of California - Los Angeles
The study was supported by the National
Library of Medicine, the National Center for Research Resources, by
a Human Brain Project Grant from the National Institutes of Health,
and by GlaxoSmithKline Pharmaceuticals UK.
The study's co-authors included Kiralee
Hayashi, Michael Hong, David Herman, David Gravano, Stephanie
Dittmer, and Arthur Toga of UCLA; Greig de Zubicaray, Andrew Janke,
Stephen Rose and David Doddrell of the University of Queensland
Center for Magnetic Resonance, Australia; and James Semple of
GlaxoSmithKline Pharmaceuticals, plc, and Addenbrooke's Hospital,
Cambridge, UK.
Video sequences, as well as time-lapse
movies (MPEGs) and color images are available online at http://www.loni.ucla.edu/~thompson/AD_4D/dynamic.html
.