Study Finds Mix of Disease Processes at Work
in Brains of Most People with Dementia
Few older people die with brains untouched by a pathological process,
however, an individual’s likelihood of having clinical signs of
dementia increases with the number of different disease processes
present in the brain, according to a new study. The research was
funded by the National Institute on Aging (NIA), part of the National
Institutes of Health, and conducted at the Rush Alzheimer’s Disease
Center at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago. Julie Schneider,
M.D., and colleagues report the findings in the journal Neurology online
today.
Among their findings is the observation that the combination of
Alzheimer’s disease and cerebral infarcts (strokes) is the most
common mix of pathologies in the brains of people with dementia.
The implication of these findings is that public health efforts
to prevent and treat vascular disease could potentially reduce
the occurrence of dementia, the researchers say in the paper.
The researchers used data from the Rush Memory and Aging Project — an
ongoing study of 1,200 elderly volunteers who have agreed to be
evaluated every year and to donate their brains upon death. The
current study compared clinical and autopsy data on the first 141
participants who have died.
Annual physical and psychological exams showed that, while they
were alive, 50 of the 141 had dementia. Upon death, a neuropathologist,
who was unaware of the results of the clinical evaluation, analyzed
each person’s brain. The autopsies showed that about 85 percent
of the individuals had evidence of at least one chronic disease
process, such as Alzheimer’s disease, strokes, Parkinson’s disease,
hemorrhages, tumors, traumatic brain injury or others.
Comparison of the clinical and autopsy results showed that only
30 percent of people with signs of dementia had Alzheimer’s disease
alone. By contrast, 42 percent of the people with dementia had
Alzheimer’s disease with infarcts and 16 percent had Alzheimer’s
disease with Parkinson’s disease (including two people with all
three conditions). Infarcts alone caused another 12 percent of
the cases. Also, 80 of the 141 volunteers who died had sufficient
Alzheimer’s disease pathology in their brains to fulfill accepted
neuropathologic criteria for Alzheimer’s disease, although in life
only 47 were clinically diagnosed with probable or possible Alzheimer’s
disease.
“We know that people can have Alzheimer’s pathology without having
symptoms,” says Dallas Anderson, Ph.D., population studies program
director in the NIA Neuroscience and Neuopsychology of Aging Program. “The
finding that Alzheimer’s pathology with cerebral infarcts is a
very common combination in people with dementia adds to emerging
evidence that we might be able to reduce some of the risk of dementia
with the same tools we use for cardiovascular disease such as control
of blood cholesterol levels and hypertension.”
NIA is conducting clinical trials to determine whether interventions
for cardiovascular disease can prevent or slow the progress of
Alzheimer’s disease. On-going trials cover a range of interventions
such as statin drugs, vitamins and exercise.
NIA leads the federal effort supporting and conducting research
on aging and the medical, social and behavioral issues of older
people, including Alzheimer’s disease and age-related cognitive
decline. For information on dementia and aging, please visit NIA’s
Alzheimer’s Disease Education and Referral Center at www.nia.nih.gov/alzheimers,
or call 1-800-438-4380. For more general information on research
and aging, go to www.nia.nih.gov.
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) — The Nation's
Medical Research Agency — includes 27 Institutes and
Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services. It is the primary federal agency for conducting
and supporting basic, clinical and translational medical research,
and it investigates the causes, treatments, and cures for both
common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and
its programs, visit www.nih.gov.
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