Predict Alzheimer’s disease 18 years before detection

21 per cent of the participants overall ended up developing Alzheimer’s disease

Update: 2015-07-01 22:52 GMT
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Errors in simple memory and cognitive tests can predict a person’s risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease up to 18 years before it can be properly diagnosed, researchers in the US report.
 
In a study of over 2,000 participants, a team from Rush University Medical Centre in Chicago found that those who got the lowest scores in the tests over an 18-year period were almost 10 times more likely to be diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease than people with higher scores. They say that by focusing on the very subtle changes in brain function that occur several decades before Alzheimer’s symptoms show up, we could figure out how to better treat, or even prevent, this devastating disease.
 
The team worked with 2,125 European-American and African-American volunteers living in Chicago with an average age of 73. None of them had been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease when they were selected for the study. The participants were given exercises that tested both their memory and cognitive skills every three years over an 18-year period. 
 
During the course of the study, 21 per cent of the participants overall ended up developing Alzheimer’s disease. According to the paper published in the journal Neurology, during the first year of the study, those who scored lower overall in the two types of tests were 9.84 times more likely to be diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease than those with higher scores. 
 
(Source: www.sciencealert.com)

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