Looking Alzheimer’s in the eye
There are currently believed to be some 35 million people
suffering from Alzheimer’s all over the world. It’s a staggering figure
that experts say could double or even triple by the year 2050. Diagnosis
is a traumatic time for both victims and their families, because there
is quite simply now cure. But a team of scientists in Munich are working
towards changing that.
There are currently believed to be some 35 million people suffering
from Alzheimer’s all over the world. It’s a staggering figure which in
light of our ageing societies is set to rise exponentially over the
coming decades. Experts say the figure could double or even triple by
the year 2050. Diagnosis is a traumatic time for both victims and their
families, because there is quite simply now cure. But a team of
scientists in Munich are working towards changing that.
Alzheimer’s sufferers become such when their beta-amyloid and tau
proteins clump together both inside and outside the nerve cells. Exactly
why it happens is unclear, but what is certain is that when
agglutination occurs, it damages essential cell functions and hinders
communication between nerve cells.
Consequently, brain cells start to die and the brain shrinks by up to
20 percent, depending on the ferocity of the illness. Patients lose
their memories and their whole personas change, they lose their sense of
time and space and can no longer deal with day-to-day existence. In its
latter stages, the illness strips its victims of their personalities,
and puts them in need of round-the-clock care.
Diagnostic issues
One of the principle problems has always been diagnosis. The brain is
good at compensating for forgetfulness and confusion – the typical
signs of dementia – and can keep up the act for as long as two decades.
By the time the extent of the problem is revealed through endless tests,
expensive magnetic resonance tomographs and nuclear medicine
procedures, as many as a third of brain cells can have been destroyed.
And that is too many to reverse the damage done.
Munich-based neuropathologist Jochen Herms and his team of 20
researchers are working towards a more simple means of diagnosis, which
would consist of nothing more than looking in the patient’s eye.
Herms’ theory is that the retinas of Alzheimer’s sufferers display
abnormalities which can be traced back to the relevant brain processes,
long long before the typical symptoms of Alzheimer begin to raise their
ugly heads. From that point onwards, the disease could be treated before
irreversible damage occurs.
The scientist is currently working on describing and proving the
connection between the retina changes and the brain. His research
requires him to experiment on brain and retina samples from deceased
Alzheimer’s patients and on genetically-altered Alzheimer’s mice.
Complementary research
Simultaneously, researchers at the Clemens-Schoepft Insitute of the
Technical University in the German city of Darmstadt are searching for
sensor pigments which make it possible to detect abnormalities in the
retina.
A study at the eye clinic at the University of Jena is looking at the
changes in the retinas of patients at an advanced stage of the disease,
and specialists at optics manufacturers Carl-Zeiss Jena are developing
the necessary retina laser scan machines.
The three year, three million euro ($3.94 million) project, which is
largely financed by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research, is
due to run until the end of 2011, and could help to spare millions of
people the fate of dementia.
Reporter: Lydia Heller (tkw)
Editor: Cyrus Farivar
http://futurenow.dw-world.de/english/category/health/alzheimers/
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