Study
focuses on patient's ability to ignore distractions
Predicting
Alzheimer’s disease has proven to be almost as elusive and difficult as curing
it — but new research has provided promising avenues for identifying it early.
Now two independent
research projects have found clues to
early-stage Alzheimer’s in the eyes of test subjects.
The first, conducted
by a team of researchers led by Thom Wilcockson of the School of Sports,
Exercise, and Health Sciences at Loughborough University, involves measuring
eye movements when subjects tried to ignore onscreen distractions.
The second, from
scientists from the University of California San Diego School of Medicine,
suggests that the speed at which a subject’s pupils dilate when focusing on a
cognitive test offers an early clue to Alzheimer’s.
A matter of focus
The Loughborough
researchers propose that the ability to maintain focus may predict which
patients with mild cognitive impairments will develop Alzheimer’s disease. The
findings were published in Aging
journal.
The mind’s ability,
not just to focus or recall facts, but to ignore stimuli, seems a powerful
predictor of Alzheimer’s.
Mild cognitive
impairment (MCI) is itself a strong predictor of Alzheimer’s. Some studies have
found that 46% of people over 65 who have MCI will develop full-blown dementia
within three years, compared with just 3% of other people in the same age
group.
Test subjects were
instructed to avoid looking at distracting objects on a computer. Scientists
then calculated the amount of times people failed to ignore these randomly
appearing spots and assigned a score that strongly correlated with the
occurrence of Alzheimer’s.
The team’s
conclusion: The mind’s ability, not just to focus or recall facts, but to ignore
stimuli, seems a powerful predictor of Alzheimer’s.
Peering at pupils
Meanwhile, the UCSD
team led by William Kremen on the observation that tau proteins, published its
latest findings about pupil dilation in Neurobiology of
Aging.
Tau proteins that
comprise the plaques and tangles in brains affected by Alzheimer’s first damage
a region of the brain called the locus coeruleus, which controls pupil
dilation. The researchers focused on whether tau buildup that affects the eyes
can identify Alzheimer’s long before it affects memory.
The UCSD team tested
the pupil response of 1,119 men age 56 to 66, then compared their performance
on the test with family histories of Alzheimer’s.
The result: Men whose
relatives had developed Alzheimer’s had slower pupil responses, suggesting
another way eye tests can diagnose Alzheimer’s early.
A growing set of
diagnostic tools
These new reports are
the latest in a string of recent developments that may power early-warning
systems for Alzheimer’s.
Sea Hero Quest,
a video game designed to spot telltale memory gaps, has been used by more than
4 million people. According to its creators, the game generates the same amount
of data in two minutes of play as it would take scientists five hours to
collect in a lab.
A recent study
by Eli Lilly & Co., Apple, and Evidation Health found that the way someone
uses their mobile device — whether it be an iPhone, tablet or
wearable — could be used to predict signs of dementia.
Meanwhile, a new blood test may be able
to identify markers of Alzheimer’s disease up to two decades before those
symptoms arise, an initial study from Washington University School of Medicine
shows. The blood test measures levels of amyloid beta, a protein fragment that
builds up in the brain to create the plaques and tangles characteristic of
Alzheimer’s.
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