Diagnosing Alzheimer's disease is difficult. Confirmation can be
obtained only postmortem, by verifying at autopsy that be brain has an
abundant amount of plaque made up of the sticky beta-amyloid protein. To
gauge Alzheimer's in living patients, neurologists must depend on
time-consuming assessments of the brain's degeneration- such as
monitoring progressive memory loss-that often delay a conclusive
judgment.



Now a new technique is poised to greatly speed diagnosis. Ongoing
studies at Uppsala University <http://www.uu.se>   in Sweden have shown
that the chemical agent dubbed Pittsburgh Compound-B, or PIB, is a
highly accurate marker of plaque buildup and that its abundance in the
brain can predict whether patient with mild cognitive impairment will
develop Alzheimer's-and when that decline will likely start. "It
has always been a puzzle," says Chester A. Mathis
<http://www.pet.upmc.edu/CHET/mathis_prof.html>  , a radiologist at the
University of Pittsburgh <http://www.pitt.edu>   who pioneered the
amyloid-imaging technique with Pittsburgh psychiatrist William E. Klunk
<http://lib.bioinfo.pl/auth:Klunk,WE>  . Even specialty clinics, Mathis
says, have trouble distinguishing those patients whose memory loss is a
prelude to Alzheimer's from those who have another underlying cause,
such as depression.



PIB works by binding to amyloid in sufficient amounts to appear in a
positron-emission tomography (PET) scan image. Because PIB selectively
binds to brain amyloid deposits but quickly clears from normal tissue,
the chemical dye accurately indicates the amount of protein that is
deposited in the living brain. Although other tracers can detect the
presence of plaque, PIB is the first to show a strong ability to predict
the onset of Alzheimer's.



The technique could provide potential Alzheimer's sufferers and
their families with several years of advance warning, allowing them to
prepare for the debilitating disease while delaying its arrival with
diet and exercise. Even more promising experts says, is the window of
opportunity for drug intervention. Many potential Alzheimer's drugs
such as Alzheimed, now in its final clinical trial, target, amyloid
plaque. PIB is not only a powerful tools for studying the efficacy of
these drugs; it is also a way to ensure that patients on the road to
Alzheimer's start getting treated early enough to minimize
irreparable neuronal loss.

Happy Learning,

Yovan P. Putra <http://primamind.blogspot.com>

www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com>


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