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|    sci.med.psychobiology    |    Dialog and news in psychiatry and psycho    |    4,734 messages    |
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|    How To Detect Dementia Before Any Sympto    |
|    13 Feb 15 19:21:55    |
      From: hounddog23x@gmail.com              How To Detect Dementia Before Any Symptoms Appear        October 15, 2014                     New early warning test for dementia developed.                            Scientists now think they can detect dementia before the symptoms appear by       using a special type of MRI brain scan technique.              The new test -- which uses arterial spin labelling -- relies on measuring the       blood flow in a certain portion of the brain.              The test is sorely needed because early diagnosis of dementia is very       important to effective therapies.              The number of people worldwide affected by dementia is currently at over 35       million, and those numbers are expected to double over the next 15 years.              The study which supports the use of this new test included 148 elderly people,       around half of whom went on to develop signs of dementia over almost two years       (Xekardaki et al., 2014).              Amongst those who later deteriorated, there was reduced blood flow in certain       key areas of the brain, as measured at the start of the research.                            In particular, reduced flow (or perfusion) was seen in the posterior cingulate       cortex, an area in the middle of the brain which is active when our minds are       not concentrating on anything specific.              Dr. Sven Haller, one of the study's authors, said:              "There is a known close link between neural activity and brain perfusion in       the posterior cingulate cortex.              Less perfusion indicates decreased neural activity."              The reason that some people do not notice any symptoms of dementia, despite       reduced flow, is that other areas of the brain are able to take up the slack.              The brain has a remarkable ability to recruit its cognitive reserves to make       up for deficits caused by age or injury, but only up to a point.              Eventually the cognitive reserves are exhausted and the patient begins to       notice some of the classic signs of dementia, like memory loss.              The test of blood flow in this area of the brain may prove a cheap and       effective way of spotting these changes before the symptoms become obvious.              Currently PET scans are used to try and spot early signs of dementia, but       these expose patients to radiation and are not as easy to administer.                     http://www.spring.org.uk/2014/10/how-to-detect-dementia-before-a       y-symptoms-appear.php?utm_source=PsyBlog&utm_campaign=1c317972bf       WEEKLY_RSS_EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_MAILCHIMP&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_       0ef814328-1c317972bf-213843469              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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