Alzheimers

Alzheimers plague build-up

Top, images from the brain of a cognitively normal volunteer; bottom, results from an Alzheimer's patient. Plaque buildup is shown in red.

A computer program that uses brain scans to spot Alzheimer’s Disease early is being tested by the NHS.
The new method compares the patient’s brain to a database of 1,200 existing images of brains known to be affected by the degenerative brain condition.
This collection of images is thought to be the largest of its kind in the world.
The test, which was developed at Maudsley Hospital and Kings College London,  delivers results that are 85 per cent accurate in just 24 hours.

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Source: The Daily Mail

How Would an Alzheimer’s Vaccine Work?

Learning how Alzheimer’s spreads is the brain critical for finding future treatments—especially if science continues to pursue an effective vaccine against Alzheimer’s. Wouldn’t it be great if at that time of birth or very short time afterward if there were a vaccine, an active vaccination that will protect us? Curious? Continue reading?

Source: BigThink

What is Alzheimer’s ?

Americans have Alzheimer’s disease, a form of dementia that causes a decline in memory and other cognitive abilities. As our aging population booms, the Alzheimer’s epidemic will increasingly become a critical issue, not just for the elderly and their families, but also for society at large. BigThinks four-week series focuses on the latest research and thinking about Alzheimer’s, including cutting-edge advances in detection, prevention, and treatment.

While much remains unknown about the deadly disease, advances in research have shed new light on its mechanisms, and on how dementia affects the aging brain. Alzheimer’s disease is an incurable—and ultimately deadly—form of dementia that causes loss of memory and other cognitive abilities. A degenerative disorder, the disease unravels the fundamental functions of the brain over time, taking with it many components of personality and identity. An estimated 5.3 million people in the U.S. currently have Alzheimer’s, and each year the disease ranks as the nation’s sixth or seventh leading cause of death. In 2007 alone, over 74,000 Americans died from Alzheimer’s.Curious? Continue reading

Source: BigThink