Today’s Solutions: May 18, 2024

Alzheimer’s is a disease that can take over the brain long before cognitive symptoms manifest themselves. This is one of the main reasons why it is so difficult to diagnose the disease at its earliest stages. But a new experimental blood test may change that.

A novel blood test detected Alzheimer’s disease as accurately as expensive brain or spinal taps, raising the possibility for a new, inexpensive, and non-invasive option to diagnose the most common form of dementia.

Researchers at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference on Tuesday presented the results of multiple studies of whether a blood test could distinguish Alzheimer’s disease from other forms of dementia.

In one of the published studies, researchers said the blood test could identify Alzheimer’s and even detected signs of the disease 20 years before cognitive problems were expected in a group of people who carry a rare genetic mutation.

What’s more, researchers reported the blood test measuring the protein tau – proteins that are typically abnormally shaped in the brains of people with Alzheimer’s – accurately distinguished Alzheimer’s from other forms of dementia in 89% to 98% of cases.

A blood test to detect Alzheimer’s early could be more precise than memory and thinking tests now used to diagnose the disease, which involves expensive brain scans and invasive spinal taps.

Randall J. Bateman, a Washington University neurology professor and Alzheimer’s researcher, said blood tests could be useful both for patients and doctors as well as scientists studying new drugs to slow the mind-robbing disease.

Doctors might use it to accurately diagnose Alzheimer’s earlier and begin treatments with existing Food and Drug Administration-approved drugs that ease symptoms, if not mental decline. But perhaps the bigger payoff would come for accelerating research for new drugs that seek to slow or halt a disease that afflicts 5.8 million older Americans.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

3 routine tips for a healthy brain

Let's take a look into the health of the organ responsible for our thoughts, movements, and consciousness. So, how do we take care of ...

Read More

Study shows cutting screen time lowers risk of death

We already know that too much screen time can affect everything from sleep quality to creativity, but a study from the University of Glasgow ...

Read More

Denver’s unarmed 911 response team arrested no one in its first 6 months

The waves of protests in 2020 against systematic racism and police brutality led to calls for cities to change their policing systems. Beyond just ...

Read More

Humpback whales share songs from different regions

Humans aren’t the only species that trade music and songs. Other intelligent animals can communicate complicated messages, like ravens and ants relaying to each ...

Read More