EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL 4 PM ET, April 13, 2011
Brain Starts Shrinking Nearly a Decade Before Alzheimer鈥檚 Appears
ST. PAUL, Minn. -
Areas of the brain affected by may start shrinking up to a decade before dementia is diagnosed, according to a new study published in the April 13, 2011, issue of the medical journal of the . For the study, researchers used MRI scans to measure areas of the brain in people with no memory problems or other signs of Alzheimer鈥檚, then followed them for years to see who developed the disease. The researchers specifically focused their measurements on areas known to be involved in AD. Those with smaller brain size in the Alzheimer鈥檚-related areas of the brain were much more likely to develop the disease than those with larger measurements. 鈥淭his measure is potentially an important imaging marker of early changes in the brain associated with Alzheimer鈥檚 disease that could help predict who might develop the dementia associated with this disease and possibly even how long it would be before dementia develops,鈥 said study author Bradford Dickerson, MD, of Harvard Medical School in Boston and a member of the 好色先生. The study involved two separate groups of people with no signs of Alzheimer鈥檚. In the first group, 33 people were followed for an average of 11 years. During that time, eight of the participants developed Alzheimer鈥檚 disease dementia. In the second group, 32 people were followed for an average of seven years, and seven of them developed the disease. The participants were divided into three groups based on the brain scans: those with low, average and high measurements in the Alzheimer鈥檚-related areas. Of the 11 people who had the lowest MRI measurements, 55 percent developed Alzheimer鈥檚, while none of the nine people with the highest measurements developed dementia. Of those with average measurements, 20 percent developed the disease. 鈥淲e also found that those who express this MRI marker of the Alzheimer鈥檚 disease in the brain were three times more likely to develop dementia over the following 10 years than those with higher measurements,鈥 Dickerson said. 鈥淭hese are preliminary results that are not ready to be applied outside of research studies right now, but we are optimistic that this marker will be useful in the future.鈥 The study, conducted by investigators at Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School in Boston and Rush University in Chicago, was supported by the National Institutes of Health, the Alzheimer鈥檚 Association, the Mental Illness and Neuroscience Discovery (MIND) Institute and the Illinois Department of Mental Health.