This study shows how to predict Alzheimer’s disease-like memory loss before it starts

Credit: CC0 Public Domain

For a person with Alzheimer’s disease, there’s no turning back the clock. By the time she begins to experience memory loss and other worrisome signs, cognitive decline has already set in.

And decades of clinical trials have failed to produce treatments that could help her regain her memory.

In a recent study published in Cell Reports, researchers approached this devastating disease from a different angle.

They showed that particular patterns of brain activity can predict far in advance whether Alzheimer’s-like memory deficits will appear in old age.

The research is at Gladstone Institutes. One author is Gladstone Senior Investigator Yadong Huang.

Previously, the team had examined a type of brain activity called sharp-wave ripples (SWRs), which play a direct role in spatial learning and memory formation in mammals.

SWRs occur when the brain of a resting mouse or human rapidly and repeatedly replays a recent memory of moving through space, such as a maze of a house.

The earlier study had found that aging ApoE4 mice have lower SWR abundance than seen in healthy aging mice.

Carrying the ApoE4 gene is associated with an increased risk—but not a guarantee—of Alzheimer’s disease in humans.

Based on those results, the team hypothesized that measuring SWR activity could predict the severity of demonstrable memory problems in ApoE4 mice during aging.

In the current study, they recorded SWR activity in aging ApoE4 mice at rest. One month later, they had the mice perform spatial tasks to test their memory.

They found that mice with fewer SWRs were indeed more likely to have worse spatial memory deficits.

They also found that deficits in SWR abundance at an early age-predicted which mice performed worse on memory tasks 10 months later—the equivalent of 30 years for a human.

Since SWRs are also found in humans, these findings suggest that SWR abundance could potentially serve as early predictors of Alzheimer’s disease, long before memory problems arise.

The team plans to determine whether SWRs in Alzheimer’s patients show deficits in abundance similar to those seen in mouse models of the disease.

If you care about Alzheimer’s disease, please read studies about to reduce risk of Alzheimer’s disease, avoid this food nutrient and findings of a new cause of Alzheimer’s disease.

For more information about Alzheimer’s and your health, please see recent studies about this prostate cancer treatment linked to Alzheimer’s disease and results showing that new depression drug may help treat Alzheimer’s disease.

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