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animated images of the impact Alzheimer's has on the brain -
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Feb. 7,
2003 - UCLA and University of Queensland (Australia) neuroscientists
using a powerful new imaging analysis technique have created the first
three-dimensional video maps showing how Alzheimer's disease
systematically engulfs the brains of living patients.
The
dramatic time-lapse videos show the sequential destruction of brain
areas that control memory function, then emotion and inhibition, and
finally sensation. They also show how the disease spares small brain
regions that control vision and other functions that remain intact in
Alzheimer's patients.
The
analysis technique, which detects very fine changes in magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI) brain scans, offers doctors and researchers a
powerful new tool that could speed diagnosis and intervention, and
development of new therapies. Currently, the impact of therapy with
cholinergic drugs and antioxidants is typically assessed only with
cognitive tests; the physical spread of the disease can be evaluated
only in autopsy studies. The findings appear in the Feb. 1 edition of
the peer-reviewed Journal of Neuroscience.
"For
the first time, you can see Alzheimer's disease progressing in living
patients," said Paul Thompson, an assistant professor of neurology at
the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and the study's chief
investigator. "We were stunned to see a spreading wave of tissue loss.
Initially confined to memory areas, this loss moved across the brain
like a wild fire, destroying more and more tissue as the disease
progressed."
"This
type of imaging will allow doctors and researchers to pinpoint where
and how fast the disease is spreading," said Thompson, a researcher at
the UCLA Laboratory of Neuro Imaging. "We will urgently apply this
method to reveal how drugs and vaccines combat the wave of brain
damage caused by Alzheimer's disease."
Alzheimer's afflicts 10 percent of people older than 65. Physicians
know that brain lesions, called amyloid plaques and tangles,
accumulate in Alzheimer's patients' brains, causing memory loss,
disorientation and declining ability to cope with everyday life as
brain cells die.
In
order to track this cell death, the research team scanned 12
Alzheimer's patients and 14 healthy elderly volunteers with MRI brain
scans every three months for two years.
Using
the new image analysis technique, the researchers found that the
Alzheimer's patients lost an average of 5.3 percent of their gray
matter per year. Brain cells were purged even faster in some brain
regions, with patients losing up to 10 percent in memory regions each
year. In contrast, healthy elderly volunteers lost only 0.9 percent of
their brain tissue annually.
The
time-lapse video based on these scans revealed that the leading edge
of cell loss moved forward like a burning frontier. As patients'
symptoms worsened, the wave of cell loss hit frontal and central brain
regions. These brain areas control patients' inhibitions and emotional
states. After two years, the disease had engulfed virtually the entire
brain.
This
report was provided by
University Of
California - Los Angeles
The
study was supported by the National Library of Medicine, the National
Center for Research Resources, by a Human Brain Project Grant from the
National Institutes of Health, and by GlaxoSmithKline Pharmaceuticals
UK.
The
study's co-authors included Kiralee Hayashi, Michael Hong, David
Herman, David Gravano, Stephanie Dittmer, and Arthur Toga of UCLA;
Greig de Zubicaray, Andrew Janke, Stephen Rose and David Doddrell of
the University of Queensland Center for Magnetic Resonance, Australia;
and James Semple of GlaxoSmithKline Pharmaceuticals, plc, and
Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, UK.
Video
sequences, as well as time-lapse movies (MPEGs) and color images are
available online at
http://www.loni.ucla.edu/~thompson/AD_4D/dynamic.html .