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|    Loss of Smell Linked to Brain Abnormalit    |
|    10 Oct 15 16:26:28    |
      From: deputydog23x@gmail.com              Medscape Medical News from the       Alzheimer's Association International Conference (AAIC) 2014              Loss of Smell Linked to Brain Abnormality, Transition to AD       Susan Jeffrey       July 14, 2014               COPENHAGEN, Denmark -- Two new studies link impaired olfactory function to       elevated brain amyloid and greater neurodegeneration in cognitively normal       adults, as well as progression to Alzheimer's disease (AD), among patients       with mild cognitive        impairment (MCI).              The findings suggest testing olfactory function may be a useful screening       biomarker in the diagnostic work-up for AD in patients at risk for dementia,       researchers say.              The new results, from the Harvard Aging Brain Study and the North Manhattan       Study, were presented here at the Alzheimer's Association International       Conference (AAIC) 2014.              Amyloid Deposition, Neurodegeneration              Previous research has shown that regions of the brain that process odor input,       including the olfactory bulb and entorhinal cortex, are particularly       susceptible to AD pathology, and are affected at early stages of the disease,       lead author Matthew E.        Growdon, MA, an MD/MPH candidate at Harvard Medical School and Harvard School       of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, pointed out.              "Building on this, there has been interest in the field to develop clinical       tests of odor identification," Growdon said. "Most notably, the one we're       talking about today is the University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification       Test, or UPSIT [Sensonics Inc]       , which is a very low-cost, easy-to-administer, 40-item scratch-and-sniff test       that can be used easily in the clinic."                     Matthew E. Growdon       In 1 study, Growdon and colleagues looked at whether there was an association       between olfaction, memory performance, and biomarkers of neurodegeneration and       amyloid deposition in clinically normal individuals participating in the       Harvard Aging Brain        Study. The sample includes 215 community-dwelling individuals aged 64 to 88       years, who undergo annual testing, including comprehensive neuropsychological       testing, hippocampal volume and entorhinal cortex thickness -- both structures       important for memory        and both measured using MRI -- and amyloid burden using Pittsburgh Compound B       positron emission tomography (PET).              He stressed that this analysis is entirely cross-sectional at this point,       looking at associations at the beginning of the study. "We're hoping to       reanalyze as we go forward longitudinally, but I'd like to emphasize we're       just looking at a snapshot in        time."              Among all the individuals in their study, smaller entorhinal cortex and       hippocampal size were associated with worse odor identification using the       UPSIT tool, and worse memory. "These were statistically significant and modest       effects," Growdon noted.              When they looked at amyloid PET findings, they found that among participants       with higher amounts of amyloid deposition in their brain, a smaller entorhinal       cortex was similarly associated with a worse UPSIT score (P = .03 for       interaction). "That suggests        at least in this small dataset that there seems to be an interplay between the       size of the subjects' brains and the amount of amyloid that they have," he       noted.              In future, they hope to further study olfactory testing as a screening       modality in 3 groups of these patients: those who did poorly just on the odor       identification (lower 25th percentile for the UPSIT test, upper 75th       percentile for the memory testing,        28% of the total patients); those who did poorly just on the memory testing       (upper 75th percentile for the UPSIT test, lower 25th percentile for memory       testing, 9% of the total patients) and those who did poorly on both tests       (lower 25th percentile for        UPSIT and memory testing, 16% of patients).              "This is a hypothesis at this point, but we would like to follow all 3 of       those groups over the next 5 years at least, and see who might be at higher       risk of developing cognitive symptoms," he said.              "I think what's interesting here in this cross-sectional study is finding       significant associations between a relatively simple, low-cost tool like the       University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test and these more       established but costly and at times        invasive biomarkers like the PET scan, and the size of the brain on MRI scan,"       Growdon said. "I think we can say there is potentially a role for something       like the [UPSIT] in clinically normal, asymptomatic older individuals, and I       envision it as        something that could flag those who are at risk for developing Alzheimer's       disease symptoms, or potentially as a gateway to more expensive or invasive       procedures like a spinal tap or a PET scan, so it could be part of a whole       panel of testing."              Still, he said, it's not yet "ready for prime time," and more longitudinal       follow-up is required to confirm that poor olfactory performance does       translate to higher AD risk. "So I find it very intriguing, but I'm also       cautious at this point about its        role as a screening tool."              Transition from MCI to AD                     Dr. Devangere Devanand       In a separate study, Devangere Devanand, MBBS, MD, professor of psychiatry and       neurology at Columbia University Medical Center, New York, New York, presented       results using the UPSIT in a group of participants in the North Manhattan       Study, an ongoing        epidemiologic study of a multiethnic community sample.              "The olfactory bulb and tract are affected earliest in Alzheimer's disease; in       brains going to pathology; in some cases it looks as if maybe even earlier       than the entorhinal cortex and the hippocampus, which is why we looked at it,"       Dr. Devanand pointed        out. He distinguished between odor sensitivity and detection, which is not       affected in AD, and odor identification, which is the aspect affected by the       disease, possibly because it requires an element of interpreting or "testing"       the odor against a        stored memory.              The UPSIT odor identification testing was added to the North Manhattan Study       evaluation during 2004 to 2006; this report looks at 2 subsequent evaluations,       at 2 years (2006 to 2008) and 4 years (2008 to 2010). The majority of       participants were women (69%)       , the mean age was 80.5 years, there was a fairly even distribution of the 3       major ethnic groups in the United States: white, African American, and       Hispanic.                     [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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