Tests for
proteins in blood may help show someone has dementia a decade before they have
symptoms, scientists say.
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Proteins in
blood may help detect if a person is suffering from dementia a decade before
they experience troubling symptoms, scientists have said.
For the study, blood samples were taken from 20 people
who later developed Alzheimer's disease, up to 10 years before they were
diagnosed and then after they were diagnosed.
Blood was also taken once from 26 people with
Alzheimer's disease and 16 people with frontotemporal dementia, which leads to
changes in personality or behaviour, and also may affect the memory.
Press Association report continues:
Samples were also taken from 46 healthy people who did
not have any problems with thinking or memory skills.
American scientists found the level of protein was
significantly different for the healthy controls than for those with dementia,
both before and after symptoms developed.
The findings are published in Neurology, the medical
journal of the American Academy of Neurology.
Gordon Wilcock, emeritus professor of clinical
geratology at the University of Oxford, said: "This is important as it
suggests that altered blood proteins may be a marker of early Alzheimer's
disease, possibly 10 years before significant memory problems develop.
"It also gives us further insight into what might
be going wrong in brain cells. However, it is too soon to consider the results
a breakthrough.
"These findings need to be checked in a larger
number of subjects to be certain that the changes are sufficiently sensitive
and specific to be used as a clinic test, and also whether they can predict
which asymptomatic people will develop dementia in due course."
Dr Eric Karran, from Alzheimer's Research UK, said:
"This small study is one of an emerging research area that might hold real
promise for early diagnosis of some neuro-degenerative diseases.
"It needs to be confirmed in much larger groups
of patients to ensure the findings reported are robust.
"The ability to accurately identify Alzheimer's
at the earliest stages would be a crucial step forward for research, as it's
likely that new treatments will have the best chance of success if given early.
"If confirmed in larger studies, these findings
could enable the right people to be recruited for clinical trials, but this
test is not designed for use in the doctor's clinic.
"Research like this can also provide valuable
clues about changes inside brain cells during Alzheimer's, helping to guide
efforts to develop new and effective treatments."
More
than half a million people in the UK are affected by Alzheimer's.
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