Alzheimer's Memory Loss Mechanism Found
Posted on: Tuesday, 11 September 2007, 12:00 CDT
U.S. medical scientists said they might have discovered the mechanism responsible for memory loss observed in Alzheimer's disease.
Researchers at the University of California-San Francisco's Gladstone Institute and the Baylor College of Medicine discovered a mechanism by which the protein Amyloid-beta might impair neurological functions in Alzheimer's disease.
Amyloid-beta, known to accumulate in the brains of Alzheimer patients, has long been a focus of research into the causes and treatment of the disease. In the new study, Gladstone scientists found A-beta triggers abnormal over-excitation of the same brain networks that are responsible for learning and memory.
Such abnormal network activity in Alzheimer's patients was thought to be a collateral or secondary event caused by the degeneration of nerve cells, said Jorge Palop, a Gladstone research scientist and lead author of the study. But our study suggests that this activity may actually be a primary effect of A-beta and an early determinant of cognitive failure.
The findings are detailed in the journal Neuron.
Source: United Press International
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